There are a number of documents and speeches that define American history. In fact, students used to have to memorize some of them. Don’t many of us remember at least the first lines of the Preamble to the Constitution, the Declaration of Independence, and the Gettysburg Address?
We at OneHistory would like to add to the list. So below you will find a couple of the classics, along with links to important speeches or documents by people who might not have been in earlier history books, but whose words we would do well to remember. If you have any suggestions for speeches we need to add, just drop us a line at info@onehistory.org.
And if you want to find out what all the shoutin’ is about, check out our Founding Documents for full text versions of the Declaration of Independence, the Preamble, the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, and Amendments11-27.
By the way, the links below will take you to the original OneHistory.org site, but they will be in new windows so that you can just close them and be right back here.
Red JacketA Speech to the Missionaries, 1805
Maria StewartWhy Sit Ye Here and Die? 1832
Sojourner Truth “Arn’t I a Woman?” 1851
Frederick Douglass The Meaning of July Fourth for the Negro, 1852
Lucy StoneA Disappointed Woman, 1855
Abraham Lincoln The Gettysburg Address, 1863
Susan B. Anthony On Being Arrested for Voting, 1872
Chief Joseph I Will Fight No More Forever, 1877 and On a Visit to Washington, D.C., 1879
Mary Church Terrell The Progress of Colored Women, 1898 and What It Means to be Colored in the Capitol of the UnitedStates, 1906
Mary McLeod Bethune What It Means to be Colored in the Capitol of the UnitedStates, 1906
Malcolm X (Coming Soon) The Ballot or the Bullet, 1964
Barbara Jordan Statement on the Articles of Impeachment, 1974 and Who then Will Speak for the Common Good? 1976
Hillary Rodham Clinton Women’sRights Are Human Rights, 1995