Browse Items (90 total)

Full text of the unpublished introduction to Richard Hofstadter's The American Political Tradition and the Men Who Made It.

Program for Hofstadter's commencement ceremony, Fosdick-Masten Park High School, June, 1933.

Certificate announcing Richard Hofstadter's scholarship award for his university education.

National Student League membership application form, 1935. Richard Hofstadter headed the University of Buffalo chapter of the organization that year.

Richard Hofstadter, review of Georgia Harkness, "The Recovery of Ideals," New York Herald Tribune, June 6, 1937

"Jefferson's Ideas of Class Relations," an essay written by Richard Hofstadter for a graduate seminar in intellectual history taught by Merle Curti at Columbia University in the late 1930s.

Full text of an unpublished essay that Richard Hofstadter wrote around 1950, entitled "The New Deal and American Liberalism." Scroll down to "Document Viewer" to browse.

A list of American historians who participated in the historic march for African-American civil rights in Alabama, March 25, 1965

A one-act play written by Richard Hofstadter while a high school student in Buffalo, NY.

Richard Hofstadter's senior thesis, written at the University of Buffalo, May, 1936.

Letter from Charles A. Beard, written May 8, 1944, congratulating Hofstadter for his article, "U.B. Phillips and the Plantation Legend," which appeared in the April 1944 issue of The Journal of Negro History.

National Student League petition against Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) programs on college campuses, 1935. That year, Richard Hofstadter headed the NSL strike publicity committee at the University of Buffalo and helped to coordinate the…

Front page of a National Student League anti-war pamphlet, 1935.

Richard Hofstadter, review of Vida Dutton Scudder, "On Journey," New York Herald Tribune, April 18, 1937.

Letter from Merle Curti to Hofstadter, 1946.

A research paper, written by Richard Hofstadter while a graduate student at Columbia University, about the politics of New York City's working class in the 1830s and '40s.

Letter from John A. Krout, professor of history at Columbia University, 1944.

Satirical description of the world of academia, written by Richard Hofstadter around 1940.

Book jacket for Richard Hofstadter's copy of The American Political Tradition and the Men Who Made It, original edition, 1940s.

Notes taken by Richard Hofstadter on President Andrew Jackson, for chapter 3 of his book, The American Political Tradition,entitled "Andrew Jackson and the Rise of Liberal Capitalism"

Cover of Hofstadter's article, "William Leggett, Spokesman of Jacksonian Democracy," in Political Science Quarterly, December, 1943.

Notes for Chapter 7 of The American Political Tradition, "The Spoilsmen: An Age of Cynicism"
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