Hero Tales from History. Smith Burnham

Hero Tales from History - Smith Burnham


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WEST

       DAVY CROCKETT, THE HERO OF THE ALAMO

       FAMOUS INVENTORS

       HOW ELI WHITNEY MADE COTTON KING

       “FULTON’S FOLLY”

       HOW MORSE SENT LETTERS BY LIGHTNING

       CYRUS H. M’CORMICK AND THE STORY OF THE REAPER

       ELIAS HOWE AND HIS SEWING MACHINE

       EDISON, THE WIZARD OF MANY INVENTIONS

       THE GREATEST AMERICANS

       BENJAMIN FRANKLIN, THE BOY WHO WAS DILIGENT IN BUSINESS

       GEORGE WASHINGTON AND HIS MOTHER

       ALEXANDER HAMILTON, THE ORPHAN BOY FROM THE WEST INDIES

       THOMAS JEFFERSON, THE FATHER OF DEMOCRACY

       ANDREW JACKSON, AMERICA’S MOST POPULAR HERO

       WEBSTER, CLAY, CALHOUN, THREE GREAT CHAMPIONS IN CONGRESS

       THE KIND HEART OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN

       ULYSSES S. GRANT, THE GENERAL WHO HATED WAR

       THE NOBLE SOUL OF ROBERT E. LEE

       DAVY FARRAGUT, THE HERO OF MOBILE BAY

       THE STRENUOUS LIFE OF ROOSEVELT

       CLARA BARTON, “THE ANGEL OF THE BATTLEFIELD”

       HENRY W. LONGFELLOW, THE AMERICAN CHILDREN’S POET

       INDEX

       Table of Contents

      AN interest in history and a love of historical reading will be most readily acquired by those children who approach this rich field of literature through the medium of stories of the great figures of the past. Such stories, if properly selected and told, give children those vivid concrete pictures of men and of events which are vitally essential to any real understanding of bygone days. At the same time such history stories may be so selected as to hold up right ideals of conduct and of character. Moreover, by their appeal to the emotions, which lie very near to the springs of conduct, they move to action. Tales of gentleness, of honor, of justice, of courage, of fortitude in suffering, of intrepidity in danger, of dauntless resolution, of iron will, inspire children to an emulation of those virtues. These “Hero Tales from History” have been written in the faith set forth in this paragraph. Through these stories the author aims to inculcate the fundamental virtues just named and at the same time to acquaint children with the names and achievements of some of those great men and women whose lives and characters are a part of our racial and national inheritance.

      In the selection of the tales in this book the author has drawn upon all ages. Here are mighty men of the ancient world and makers of modern America. Some of the characters chosen as the heroes of these stories are great figures in world history, but the greater part of them were selected because they are among the foremost heroes of our own country and of our own culture. Of course in a book of this size many valuable stories had to be omitted. But it is believed that all the tales included are typical and representative.

      These “Hero Tales” are not biographies of the men about whom they are told, neither has any attempt been made to join them into a connected historical narrative. They are just stories from the past told with constant thought of the stage of mental development of the children for whom they are intended. Each story has a hero, each is full of action, and the author has tried to tell each one in clear and simple language. The author has also tried to make each story teach its intended lesson without any moralizing on his part.

      The history of the past can never become a vital thing to us until the men of the past are live, flesh and blood men. It is the author’s hope that these “Hero Tales from History” will help to make threescore great figures from our past something more than names to the children who may enjoy this book.

      Smith Burnham.

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      LONG ago in the land of Egypt there lived as slaves to the Egyptians a race of white people called the Hebrews. There were so many of them that the Egyptians began to be afraid that they would over-run the land. So the cruel king, or the Pharaoh, as he was called, commanded that all the baby boys of the slave race should be thrown into the River Nile. But one little child escaped this fate, for his poor slave mother disobeyed the king and hid her baby in her hut. When he was three months old, his mother was afraid she could not keep him quiet any longer. So she made a basket, and plastered it inside with pitch, so that it would be water-tight and float like a boat. Into this basket-boat she put her baby.

      The mother set the strange little boat on the edge of the River Nile, among the tall reeds called bulrushes, very near the place where she knew the king’s daughter came every day to bathe. It was a cool spot, well guarded and safe from the terrible crocodiles that lived in the Nile. After making sure that the little boat would not sink, the mother went back to her work, leaving her daughter Miriam to see what became of her baby brother.

      Just as the wise mother had planned, the princess soon came with her ladies-in-waiting, and spied the cradle basket rocking on the waves near the shore. She told one of her maidens to bring it to her. The king’s daughter knew too well of her father’s command to drown or kill all the boy babies of the Hebrew slaves. So when she found a baby crying there, she pitied the poor mother who had obeyed the king by putting him in the river, still fondly hoping to save his life.

      When the Pharaoh’s daughter saw the babe, she said, “This is one of the Hebrews’ children!”


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