Enemies to their country : the Marblehead Addressers and consensus in the American Revolution /

"In 1774, a group of elite men in the town of Marblehead, Massachusetts, just outside Salem, wrote an address to the royal governor thanking him for his service to the colony, even as town residents began demanding independence from Great Britain. Town meeting records reveal how the town's...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gentile, Nicholas W. (Author)
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Amherst ; Boston : University of Massachusetts Press, [2025]
Subjects:
Description
Summary:"In 1774, a group of elite men in the town of Marblehead, Massachusetts, just outside Salem, wrote an address to the royal governor thanking him for his service to the colony, even as town residents began demanding independence from Great Britain. Town meeting records reveal how the town's patriot majority pressured the signers to withdraw their support for the governor and demanded public recantations and issued damning reports, even forcing some of the signers into exile. Enemies to Their Country tells the story of the year following the Address, chronicling the town's struggle to achieve consensus even as the war for American independence started. This microhistory of one vitally important town, the second largest in Massachusetts at the time, with a thriving local economy based on fishing and a robust community of religious and civically engaged citizens, complicates simplistic ideas of the American Revolution. Through compelling stories of neighboring individuals and families, many of which have not been told, it also provides an example of a politically polarized constituency struggling to find consensus at a time of great conflict."--Back cover
Physical Description:xxvii, 175 pages ; 23 cm
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:9781625348968
9781625348951
1625348959
1625348967