This book explores how the loyalist rebuttal to the American patriot movement during the decade leading up to 1776 derived much of its inspiration and rationale from the ancient literature of the Greco-Roman world--the same repository of classical ideas and principles the patriots coopted to persuade their fellow countrymen to disavow the English crown and pursue independence. Although previous histories have described how the ideas of the classical world, transmitted through the Renaissance and Enlightenment writers, were important--even vital--to the revolutionary movement and the founders of the American Republic, few questions have been raised in the historiography concerning the loyalists' political motivations and actions with respect to the ancient literary canon. Classical republican ideas did not predispose British Americans to rebel against the crown. Rather, the decision to declare independence was the outcome of a highly contested ideological struggle waged between adversaries well-versed in the literature, motifs, and principles of the ancient world. Invoking the classical literary canon, the loyalist rebuttal posed a significant challenge to the legitimacy and rationale of the colonial resistance. The fact the Whig-patriots were able to surmount these formidable obstacles demonstrates just how radical, in an ideological sense, the revolutionary movement truly was.
David Forman and Joshua Huddy, a vicious, disowned Quaker, troublemaker, and felon. After the Battle of Monmouth, General Forman's duty was to report to General Washington on British warships from New York to Little Egg Harbor, ...
Son of a Patriot, Servant of a King Sheila L. Skemp, University Sheila L Skemp. William with just a touch of flattery, ... “This,” he patronized his son, “is the Opinion of all wise Men here.” Franklin reserved his most vicious—and most ...
Index Lake Champlain 24 , 25 Lathrop , Daniel 7 , 10 Lee , Light Horse Harry 40 Lexington , Massachusetts 4 , 12 Liberty ( ship ) 16 Lincoln , Benjamin 30 Lockwood , Reuben 8 looting 15 , 23 Loyalists 4 , 5 , 23 , 33 , 34 , 36 maps 13 ...
A reprint of a book originally published in 1988 by W. H. James. A factual account of the loyalists who migrated from America to Exuma after the War of Independence.
"This book tells, for the first time, the life story of William Marsh, a little-known but intriguing Revolutionary figure.
The British-Americans: The Loyalist Exiles in England, 1774-1789
36r., Sharpand WilliamsS;landof heirsof William Douglasdeceased W.; land ofheirsof EdwardBromfield deceased N.land ofheirsofElizabeth Brewer deceased E.——Woodlot in Roxbury, 2A.1 qr 17 r, highway W.: Capt. Baker S.; John Harris E.; ...
A Little Revenge: Benjamin Franklin and His Son
A study of the life and character of the brilliant Revolutionary War general who deserted to the British for money.
The famous traitor's first modern biography unearths new evidence explaining why this successful general changed sides, and analyzes his agonized career