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The Whites of their Eyes

Page 21

by Matt Braun

Lukas, J. Anthony, 117

  Lynd, Staughton, 67

  Maddow, Rachel, 159

  Madison, James, 22, 105, 106, 113, 119, 122, 123

  Malcolm X, 65, 134

  Malkin, Michelle, 9

  Malone, Kat, 35, 90, 135

  Marcus, Lloyd, 136

  Mardi (Melville), 114

  Marshall, Jocelyn, 160

  Marshall, Thomas, 60–61

  Marshall, Thurgood, 119–20

  Marshall School, 79–80

  Maryland Gazette, Expiring, 39

  Massachusetts Constitution, 109

  Massachusetts Family Institute, 5

  Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), 137

  Massachusetts Poor Laws, 48

  Massachusetts Tenth Amendment Resolution, 156

  Maternal Physician, The (M. Tyler), 148

  Mather, Cotton, 31

  Maverick, Samuel, 62

  Mayflower, 1, 5

  McCarthy, Eugene, 67

  McCarthyism, 13

  McCullough, David, 46

  McVeigh, Timothy, 22

  “Meaning of July Fourth for the Negro, The” (Douglass), 73

  Mecom, Benjamin, 50–51, 131, 138

  Mecom, Edward, 49, 50

  Mecom, Jane, 47–48, 51, 56–57, 102, 122, 138, 141

  Christianity of, 148–49

  death of, 143

  death of her children, 49, 55

  death of her husband, 49–50

  despair of, 54–55

  marriage of, 49

  plundering of her home by the British, 131

  on poverty and lack of education, 153–54

  Mecom, Peter, 50, 59

  insanity and death of, 138–39

  Mecom, Polly, 55

  media, old/mainstream/“liberal,” 40–41

  Melvill, Thomas, 81, 86–87, 187n25

  Melville, Herman, 87, 114

  “Memorial Remonstrance against Religious Assessments” (Madison), 122

  Mencken, H. L., 16–17

  Mineau, Kris, 5

  minutemen, 66, 93, 101–2

  Minutemen Bicycle Path, 155

  Montgomery, Hugh, 61

  Moorhead, Scipio, 75

  Moral Majority, 13

  Morgan, Edmund S., 73, 74, 96

  Moses, 13

  National Center for Constitutional Studies, 112–13

  National Organization for Women (NOW), 82

  Nell, William Cooper, 114–15, 115–16

  New-England Courant, 30–31, 32, 144

  New-Hampshire Gazette, 39, 40

  New Left, the, 73

  New York Constitution, 107

  Newspaper Death Watch, 41

  newspapers: decline of in contemporary times, 41

  history of, 30–31

  Newsweek, 67

  Nixon, Richard, 5, 7, 65, 71–72, 81–83, 117, 187n27

  Nixon’s Bicentennial Commission. See American Revolution Bicentennial Commission

  Obama, Barack, 3, 91, 98–99, 112

  the Right’s view of, 8–9

  the Tea Party’s view of, 136

  Obamacare, 43, 64, 152

  Old South Meeting House, 78–79

  Oliver, Andrew, 33, 36

  Oliver, Peter, 21, 24, 25, 33, 36

  O’Neil, Jim, 83

  “On the Affray in King Street” (P. Wheatley), 62

  “On the Arrival of the Ships of War, and the Landing of the Troops” (P. Wheatley), 57

  O’Reilly, Bill, 157

  Organization of American Historians, 157–58

  originalism, 118–125

  in the courts, 123–25

  “Origin & Progress of the American Revolution” (Oliver), 21

  Origin of Evil, The (R. Tyler), 148

  Otis, James, Jr., 25, 34, 36, 58, 64, 133, 141

  insanity of, 59, 74–75, 182n38

  Otis, James, Sr., 25

  Our Country Deserves Better, 37

  Paine, Thomas, 46, 92, 129–30, 137–38, 141, 147, 148, 149

  arrest of, 142–43

  dementia and death of, 145–46

  statement of concerning his belief in God but not creeds, 143, 196n59

  Palin, Sarah, 37, 97, 99, 111, 135, 136–37, 156, 157

  Parker, Theodore, 115

  Pataki, George, 152–53, 155

  Patient Protection and Affordable Health Care Act (2010), 83

  passage of, 90. See also health care reform

  Patriot’s Day, 155

  Paul, Rand, 159

  Paul, Ron, 79, 159

  “Paul Revere’s Ride” (Longfellow), 6–7

  Pelham, Henry, 34, 63, 75, 102

  Pelosi, Nancy, 91, 112

  Pennsylvania Gazette, 32

  Pennsylvania Journal, 39

  Peoples Bicentennial Committee, 65, 72, 82, 84, 96, 134

  People’s History of the United States (Zinn), 66

  Perry, Jeff, 156

  Peters, John, 139

  Philadelphia Hospital, 131

  Phillis, 26–27

  Pledge of Allegiance, 127–28

  Plessy v. Ferguson (1896), 114

  Plymouth Rock Foundation, 5

  Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral (P. Wheatley), 76

  Poindexter, Leon, 89

  Poor Richard’s Almanack (B. Franklin), 52

  Preston, Thomas, 11–12, 61

  Price, Richard, 153–54

  Problem of Slavery in the Age of Revolution, The (Davis), 73

  Publick Occurrences, 30

  Putnam, Israel, 103

  Quartering Act (1764), 56

  Quincy, Josiah, 79, 93

  Ramsey, David, 21–22, 28, 39, 146

  Reagan, Ronald, 147

  Real George Washington, The (Allison and Parry), 157

  Rebels, The (Child), 86

  Reconstruction Act (1867), 110–11

  Reed, Ralph, 147

  Remick, Christian, 63

  Republican Party, 9, 41, 95

  Retrospect of the Boston Tea-Party, A: With a Memoir of George R. T. Hewes (Hewes), 87

  Revere, Paul, 34, 42, 57, 63, 91, 101, 116, 146

  equestrian statue of, 152, 153

  “Revere America,” 152–53

  Ridpath, John, 8

  Rifkin, Jeremy, 65, 72, 84, 95–96, 134, 147

  Rights of Man, The (Paine), 142, 146

  Rights of Man, The, Part the Second (Paine), 142

  Rights of the British Colonies Asserted and Proved, The (J. Otis, Jr.), 29

  Roberts v. City of Boston (1850), 114

  Roe v. Wade (1973), 119

  Romney, Mitt, 100, 122

  same-sex marriage, 42

  Santelli, Rick, 3, 20, 51

  Sartor, Caesar, 76

  “Saturday Night Massacre,” 81–82

  Schlesinger, Arthur, Jr., 38, 67, 69, 117, 184nn56–57

  Sedition Act (1798), 144

  Seven Years’ War. See French and Indian War

  Shabazz, Betty, 134

  Shaw, Lemuel, 114

  Shaw, Robert Gould, 135

  Shay’s Rebellion, 22

  Sherman, Roger, 131

  Short Narrative of the Horrid Massacre in Boston, A (S. Adams), 63

  “silent majority,” 4–5

  Sims, Thomas, 114–15

  slavery/slaves, 27, 28–29, 54, 75–76, 93–94, 96, 106, 133, 190n20

  abolishment of in Massachusetts, 154

  American sailors held as slaves by Barbary Coast states, 149

  banning of as a detriment to colonial unity, 74

  escape from slavery during the American Revolution, 139–40

  as an issue during the American Revolution, 113–16

  outlawing of in Vermont, 141

  punishments for slave rebellion, 58

  slave rebellion, 57–58. See also Declaration of Independence, Jefferson’s initial attack against slavery in; liberty, and slavery

  Sleepy Hollow, 17

  Sons of Harvard, 54

  Sons of Liber
ty, 8, 42, 58, 63, 77, 81

  origins of, 34

  Sousa, John Philip, IV, 136

  Spirit of Seventy-Six, The, 17

  “Squabble of the Sea Nymphs, The” (M. O. Warren), 85

  Stamp Act (1765), 29–30, 39

  repeal of (1766), 54

  riots as a result of, 33–34

  Stamp Act Congress, 39

  Stark, Joseph Andrew, 10

  Stowe, Harriet Beecher, 116

  Sugar and Currency Acts (1764), 28, 29

  Sumner, Charles, 114

  Taxation No Tyranny (S. Johnson), 93

  taxation/taxes, 7, 15, 53, 84, 106, 190n20

  on tea, 77–78. See also Townshend Duties (1767)

  Tax Day (April 15), Tea Party protests held on, 3–4, 8, 20, 98

  Taylor, Earl, 157

  Tea Act (1773), 77

  Tea Party, 2–3, 7, 64, 97

  Chicago Tea Party, 3

  chief political asset of, 14

  gathering of on the Boston Common (2010), 126–29, 135–37

  message of as antihistory, 8

  as a product of a reactionary view of American history, 68

  rumors concerning, 37–38

  “TEA” acronym of (“Taxed Enough Already”), 37. See also Boston Tea Party (2009); Tax Day (April 15), Tea Party protests held on; Tea Party Express; “Tea Party Weekend”

  Tea Party Express, 37, 126, 127, 136, 152

  “Tea Party Weekend,” 82–83

  Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills (TEKS), 159

  Texas School Board, 12–15, 158–60

  Thoreau, Henry David, 54

  Tibbels, Jean Paul, 42

  Touchstone, The; Or a Humble Modest Inquiry into the Nature of Religious Intolerance (R. Tyler), 150–51, 196n63

  Townshend Duties (1767), 54, 55

  repeal of (1770), 77

  Treaty of Paris (1783), 17, 149

  Treaty of Tripoli (1797), 150

  “Tree of Liberty” statement: as part of Tea Party paraphernalia, 22

  popularity of among 1990s militia groups, 22

  Trenchard, John, 59–60

  True Uses of American Revolutionary History, The (Curtis), 7–8

  Tuerck, David, 4

  Twain, Mark, 142

  Tyler, Mary, 148

  Tyler, Royall, 147–48, 149

  as a lay preacher, 148

  on religious intolerance, 150–51

  United States, as a Christian nation, 4, 5, 74, 95, 99, 120, 150, 157, 158–59

  U.S. Constitution, 13, 22–23, 106–7, 112

  Article VI of, 122

  bicentennial of, 119–20

  First Amendment of, 122. See also originalism

  Varley, Christen, 35, 43, 64, 94, 98, 99, 126

  beliefs concerning global warming, 41–42

  involvement in politics, 41

  Vietnam Veterans Against the War, 66, 78, 136

  voting, history of, 104–6

  literacy tests, 110

  paper/ticket balloting in the colonies, 107–11

  and the U.S. Constitution, 106–7

  women’s suffrage, 110

  Voting Rights Act (1965), 23, 111

  Wagner, Edward, 37–38

  Warner, John, 133

  Warren, James, 28, 74

  Warren, Joseph, 90, 91, 101, 103

  Warren, Mercy Otis, 28, 36, 74, 75, 85, 93

  Christianity of, 148–49

  death of, 146

  reply of to John Adams’s criticism of her work, 45–46

  Washington, George, 11, 17, 64, 94, 106, 123, 130, 133

  as commander of the Continental Army, 103, 104, 138

  Washington, Harry, 133, 140–41

  Washington Post, 83, 134

  Watergate, 14, 72, 81, 83, 90

  Waugh, Caleb, 137

  “Way to Wealth, The” (B. Franklin), 51–54

  Webster, Daniel, 61, 86

  Weems, Mason (Parson Weems), 103

  West, Benjamin, 56

  Wheatley, John, 27

  Wheatley, Phillis, 27, 57, 62, 64, 93–94, 130

  Christianity of, 148–49

  freedom of, 77

  marriage of, 139

  meeting with Benjamin Franklin, 76

  travel to England, 75–76

  Whig Party, 23, 88

  White, Hugh, 61

  White, Kevin, 72, 83

  Williams, Mark, 136

  Williams, Roger, 122

  Wilson, Woodrow, 172n30

  Winthrop, John, 105

  women, education of in the colonial era, 48–49

  Young, Brigham, 122

  Youth’s Companion, 127–28

  Zinn, Howard, 66

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