William Appleman Williams
| Use attributes for filter ! | |
| Gender | Male |
|---|---|
| Death | 35 years ago |
| Date of birth | June 12,1921 |
| Zodiac sign | Gemini |
| Born | Atlantic |
| Iowa | |
| United States | |
| Date of died | March 5,1990 |
| Died | Newport |
| Oregon | |
| United States | |
| Other academic advisors | William Best Hesseltine |
| Notable students | Walter LaFeber |
| Lloyd Gardner | |
| Job | Historian |
| Education | Kemper Military School |
| University of Wisconsin-Madison | |
| United States Naval Academy | |
| Influenc | C. Wright Mills; Charles A. Beard; |
| Doctor advisor | Fred Harvey Harrington |
| Doctor student | Walter LaFeber; Thomas J. McCormick; Lloyd Gardner; Jim Ranchino; Carl Parrini |
| Walter LaFeber | |
| Thomas J. McCormick | |
| Lloyd Gardner | |
| Jim Ranchino | |
| Carl Parrini | |
| Nationality | American |
| Academic advisor | Fred H Harrington |
| Date of Reg. | |
| Date of Upd. | |
| ID | 442815 |
The roots of the modern American empire
History as a Way of Learning
The great evasion
A William Appleman Williams reader
American- Russian relations, 1781-1947
Americans in a changing world
The shaping of American diplomacy
From Colony to Empire: Essays in the History of American Foreign Relations
The United States, Cuba, and Castro
American: Russian Relations 1781
The Tragedy of American Diplomacy
The contours of American history
Empire as a way of life
History as a Way of Learning: Articles, Excerpts, and Essays
History as a Way of Learning
The great evasion
A William Appleman Williams reader
American- Russian relations, 1781-1947
Americans in a changing world
The shaping of American diplomacy
From Colony to Empire: Essays in the History of American Foreign Relations
The United States, Cuba, and Castro
American: Russian Relations 1781
The Tragedy of American Diplomacy
The contours of American history
Empire as a way of life
History as a Way of Learning: Articles, Excerpts, and Essays
William Appleman Williams Life story
William Appleman Williams was one of the 20th century's most prominent revisionist historians of American diplomacy.