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Each of our CD-ROMs has different copyright rules that determine who may buy products through our website.

  • All institutional and individual purchases--CD-ROM I: Who Built America? From the Centennial Exhibition of 1876 to the Great War of 1914 is exclusively available for all institutional use, including course adoption through bookstores, and individual purchases through our website. If you wish to use this CD-ROM in bulk for your class or organization please order through our website. For discount information on large quantities pleases contact Joshua Brown.

  • Individual copies only--CD-ROM II: Who Built America? From the Great War of 1914 to the Dawn of the Atomic Age in 1946 is only available for individual purchase from our website. For educational or institutional use that requires multiple or bulk purchases, including course adoption through bookstores, you must purchase the CD-ROM through Worth Publishing. You may call Worth Publishers Customer Service: 1-888-330-8477 or visit their website.



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PayPal enables any consumer with an email address to securely, conveniently, and cost-effectively send and receive payments online. They offer their service to users in 38 countries, including the United States. The size of their network has helped PayPal become the leading payment network for online auction websites, including eBay. PayPal's service, which lets users send payments for free, can be used from PCs or Web-enabled mobile phones. For more information visit PayPal.

If you have problems with receipt of your CD-ROMs or wish to learn more about sales of the Who Built America? CD-ROM series contact Joshua Brown. For technical support for our disks, contact Roy Rosenzweig.

American Social History Productions, Inc. serves as the not-for-profit subsidiary and holds the copyright to all text, video, and multimedia materials produced by the American Social History Project.

The American Social History Project/Center for Media and Learning aims to revitalize interest in history by challenging the traditional ways that people learn about the past. Founded in 1981 and based at The Graduate Center of the City University of New York, ASHP/CML produces award-winning print, visual, and multimedia materials about the working men and women whose actions and beliefs shaped American history. ASHP/CML also leads faculty development programs that help high school and college teachers across the country use the latest scholarship, technology, and active learning methods in their classrooms. Learn more about the American Social History Project.

Since 1994, the Center for History and New Media has used digital media and computer technology to change the ways that scholars, students, and the general public learn about and use the past. We do that by bringing together the most exciting and innovative digital media with the latest and best historical scholarship. We believe that serious scholarship and cutting edge multimedia can be combined to promote an inclusive and democratic understanding of the past as well as a broad historical literacy that fosters deep understanding of the most complex issues about the past and present. Learn more about the Center for History and New Media.