Oliver Morton Dickerson
#82,122
Most Influential Person Across History
American historian
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Why Is Oliver Morton Dickerson Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Oliver Morton Dickerson was an American historian, author, and educator. Like his fellow historians Charles McLean Andrews and Lawrence Henry Gipson, Dickerson was a proponent of the "Imperial school" of historians who believed that the American colonies could not be studied or understood except as part of the British Empire. Among his publications were works on the British Board of Trade, the Navigation Acts, and Boston under military rule.
Oliver Morton Dickerson's Published Works
Number of citations in a given year to any of this author's works
Total number of citations to an author for the works they published in a given year. This highlights publication of the most important work(s) by the author
Published Works
- The navigation acts and the American Revolution (1951) (56)
- Boston under military rule, 1768-1769,: As revealed in a Journal of the times (1971) (6)
- Use Made of the Revenue from the Tax on Tea (1958) (6)
- The Commissioners of Customs and the "Boston Massacre" (1954) (2)
- Opinion of Attorney General Jonathan Sewall of Massachusetts in the Case of the Lydia (1947) (2)
- British Control of American Newspapers on the Eve of the Revolution (1951) (2)
- The Correspondence of General Thomas Gage with the Secretaries of State, and with the War Office and the Treasury, 1763–1775. Compiled and edited by Clarence Edwin Carter. Vol. II. (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1933. vii + 735 pp. $5.00.) (1934) (1)
- England's Most Fateful Decision (1949) (1)
- The Old Colonial System, 1660-1754@@@The Establishment of the System, 1660-1688 (1913) (1)
- A Screening Service for Social Science Teaching (1949) (0)
- Reminiscences of an American Loyalist 1738–1789. Edited by his Grandson, Jonathan Bouchier. (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1925. xi, 201 p. $6.) (0)
- The Boulder Canyon Project: Historical and Economic Aspects. By Paul L. Kleinsorge. (Stanford University: Stanford University Press, 1941. xiv + 330 pp. Bibliography, maps, and illustrations. $3.50.) (1941) (0)
- The making of South Carolina. By Henry Alexander White, M.A., Ph.D., D.D., professor in Columbia Theological Seminary, Columbia, South Carolina. [Stories of the states.] (New York, Atlanta, Boston, Dallas, and Chicago: Silver, Burdett and Company, 1914. 344 p. $.65) (1916) (0)
- Roger Sherman, Signer and Statesman. By Roger S. Boardman. (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1938. xii + 396 pp. Illustrations, appendices, and bibliography. $4.00.) (1938) (0)
- The Correspondence of King George the Third, from 1760 to December, 1783. Vol. III, July, 1773–Deeember, 1777; Vol. IV, 1778–1779; Vol. V, 1780–April, 1782 ; Vol. VI, May, 1782–December, 1783. Edited by the Hon. Sir John Fortescue (1928) (0)
- Introduction to American histrory. By James Albert Woodburn, professor of American history and politics, Indiana university, and Thomas Francis Moran, professor of history and economics, Purdue university. (New York: Longmans, Green, and company, 1916. 308 p. $.72) (0)
- Liberty and Property by R. V. Coleman (1951) (0)
- The Attempt to Extend British Customs Controls over Intercolonial Commerce by Land (1951) (0)
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