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The Martyr and the Traitor

Nathan Hale, Moses Dunbar, and the American Revolution

Format: Hardback
Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc, New York, United States
Published: 29th Jun 2017
Dimensions: w 177mm h 239mm d 25mm
Weight: 508g
ISBN-10: 0199916861
ISBN-13: 9780199916863
Barcode No: 9780199916863
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Synopsis
Two men from Connecticut, each embarked on a dangerous mission, slipped onto Long Island in September 1776. Only a few weeks earlier, British forces had routed the Continental Army and taken control of New York City. The future of the infant American republic, barely two months old, looked bleak. One of the men, a soldier disguised as a schoolmaster, made his way to the British fortifications on Manhattan and began furtively taking notes and making sketches to bring back to the beleaguered American general, George Washington. The second visitor had quite different plans. He had come to Long Island to accept a captain's commission in a loyalist regiment, an undertaking that obligated him to return to Connecticut and recruit more farmers to join the King's forces. As events turned out, neither man completed his mission. Instead, each met his death at the end of a hangman's rope, one executed as a spy for the American cause and the other as a traitor to it. In this book, Virginia Anderson traces the lives of these two men, Nathan Hale and Moses Dunbar, to explore how middle-class men made decisions on a daily basis amidst the uncertainties of war that determined not just their own fates but also the ways in which they have been remembered or forgotten in history. Hale uttered a line that has become famous ("I only regret, that I have but one life to lose for my country") and, after being captured and executed as a spy by the British, and the Americans winning the war, has been memorialized as a martyr to the Revolutionary cause. His life is neatly contrasted with Dunbar, a Loyalist who was captured and sentenced to death by the Connecticut Assembly. This braided narrative, intertwining the lives of Hale and Dunbar, offers a poignant snapshot of the political loyalties men forge in momentous times, how their families shaped and reacted to those decisions, and how difficult it is to judge individuals' decisionmaking in wartime without the benefit of hindsight, when the outcome is dependent on complex factors. This book bridges"great man" biographies about the American Revolution and the "bottom up" social histories of common men, and the histories of patriots and loyalists. Its accessible style makes it appropriate for anyone interested in Revolutionary America.

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A highly readable and accessible double biography...The Martyr and the Traitor is part of a current trend of books on the American Revolution that casts the American Revolution as a civil war. This book has great potential in the undergraduate classroom: It is hard to think of a more vivid example of contingency. Through these two evocative stories readers come away with an understanding of how global politics reverberated along local lines. * Serena Zabin, Journal of the Early Republic * A highly readable and accessible double biography...The Martyr and the Traitor is part of a current trend of books on the American Revolution that casts the American Revolution as a civil war. This book has great potential in the undergraduate classroom: It is hard to think of a more vivid example of contingency. Through these two evocative stories readers come away with an understanding of how global politics reverberated along local lines. * Serena Zabin, Journal of the Early Republic * Well written and thought provoking ... The Martyr and the Traitor is a most welcome reminder of the complex personal struggles entailed in the building of the American nation. Virginia DeJohn Anderson's telling of the stories of Nathan Hale and Moses Dunbar dispels any facile slogans of patriotic fervor. * Robert S. McPherson, Michigan War Studies Review * Groundbreaking and relevant....Anderson's work is a microhistory of two individuals with a highly engaging biographical narrative that shows how social networks, circumstances, and localized concerns influenced loyalties and decisions....Highly engaging, eloquent, and convincing, the narrative at once further complicates and yet clarifies how the Revolution played out on a localized scale....Anderson presents sophisticated scholarship in an inviting manner and really
opens up the world of Hale and Dunbar to the reader along with the crucial reminder that American independence was not a foregone conclusion and how easily things could have been different....A page turner. * Kelly Mielke, Journal of the American Revolution *