by Ray Raphael
Morris, Lewis, 282, 390n5
Morris, Richard B., 65, 92, 263–64
Morris, Robert, 160, 164–65, 365n9
Morristown and “The Hard Winter†(1779–80), 107–13, 117–18, 266, 353n26
Morristown National Historical Park, 353n36
Moultrie, William, 192
Mudd, Roger, 162–63
Munroe, William, 14, 15, 19
Murray, Charles, 364–65n7
Muzzey, David Saville, 274
Napoleonic Wars, 56
narrative fallacies, 300–302
A Narrative of the Excursion and Ravages of the King’s Troops, 12, 76
National Council for Social Studies, 2002 conference, 259–60, 274, 377n31, 383n39
Native Americans. See Indians
NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization), 259
navigation laws, 153, 363n25
The Negro in Our History (Woodson), 213
The Negro in the American Rebellion (Brown), 376n20
The Negro in the American Revolution (Quarles), 214–15, 216
Nell, William, 210–11, 376n20
Nelson, Josiah, 19
New Hampshire, 20, 25, 82, 86, 130, 362n17; Federal Convention delegation and Great Compromise debates, 362n14
New Jersey: Federal Convention delegation and Great Compromise debates, 147–48. See also Morristown and “The Hard Winter†(1779–80)
New Jersey Brigade, 112, 353n36
New Jersey Turnpike, 318
“A New Touch on the Times†(poem), 321–22
New York: and the Hard Winter, 108–9; local declaration of independence, 357n15
“Newburg Conspiracy,†105
Newman, Robert, 18
North, Lord Frederick, 87–88, 244, 254, 261
North Carolina: brutality of the Revolution in the South, 228–31; Federal Convention delegation and Great Compromise debates, 362n14; and the Hard Winter, 108; Waxhaws incident, 190–91, 228–29
Northwest Ordinance (1787), 275–77
Old North Church (Boston), 9, 11, 20, 24
Old South Meeting House (Boston), 35, 335n22
Oliver, Andrew, 33–34
Oliver, Peter, 30–32, 37, 334n5
Olsen, Eric P., 353n36
Oneida Indians, 265–66
Onondaga Indians, 265–66
oral tradition and American Revolution, 2–3, 292
Oriskany, New York, 265
Orne, Azor, 18–19
O’Shaughnessy, Andrew Jackson, 385n46
Otis, James, Jr., 30–32, 285, 303
Otis, James, Sr., 31
pacifists, 194, 246
Paine, Thomas, 38, 137–38, 300, 304, 360n46
Parker, James, 180–81
Parkman, Breck, 82
Paterson, William, 147–48
The Patriot (film), 205–9, 225–31; myth of British brutality, 225–31, 236–37; myth of patriotic slaves, 205, 208–9, 219; and slaves in the Revolutionary War, 205–9
Patriotic Sons of America, 64
patriotism and founding myths, 5–6, 144, 178, 286, 294, 330n7
Patriots: The Men Who Started the American Revolution (Langguth), 27, 244, 372n27
Paul Revere and the World He Lived In (Forbes), 22
Paul Revere’s Ride (Fischer), 22
“Paul Revere’s Ride†(Longfellow), 9–11, 15–25, 331n28, 395n2
Payne, Edward, 44
Peckham, Howard, 191, 248, 351n2, 354n37
Pennsylvania: Federal Convention delegation and Great Compromise debates, 145–50, 362n14; and Molly Pitcher story, 51, 53, 61–67, 344n33, 345n42; Philadelphia winter of 1777–1778, 107–8, 352n21; termination of slavery in, 218
Pennsylvania Gazette, 126
Pennsylvania Line, 353n36
Pennsylvania militia, 267
Pennsylvania State House, 142, 155. See also Federal Convention (1787)
People’s History of the American Revolution (Raphael), 35, 340n8
people’s revolution. See Massachusetts Revolution of 1774
Peters, Thomas, 221, 378n45
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 107–8, 352n21. See also Federal Convention (1787)
Philipsburg Proclamation, 218
Phillips, Wendell, 210
Pickering, Timothy, 97, 359n32
Pictorial Field-Book of the Revolution (Lossing), 15, 210, 292
Pierce, William, 230
Pinckney, Charles, 152–53, 211
Pinckney, Charles Cotesworth, 152
Pitcher, Moll Dimond, 59–60, 343n26
Pitcher, Molly, 4–5, 49–71, 50, 312, 315, 317–18; artists and, 50, 51–52, 60, 340n8; Battle of Monmouth, 49–68, 317–18, 341n14, 342nn20–21, 343n29, 344n33; “Captain Molly†name and legend, 53–60, 64–65, 69–71, 342n20, 343n26, 345n42; and Carlisle, Pennsylvania, 51, 53, 61–67, 344n33, 345n42; “Dirty Kate,†54; evolution of legend, 53–69, 341n14, 343n29; and female “camp followers,†51, 53–56, 60, 66, 69–70, 341n14; historians and, 64–70, 344n33, 346n48; Internet and legend of, 68–69, 317–18, 347n54; “Maid of Saragossa,†56–57, 63; Margaret Corbin, 54, 64–65, 67, 69; Mary Hays McCauley, 51, 61–70, 317–18, 344n33, 345n42, 346n48; Moll Dimond Pitcher, 59–60, 343n26; newspaper accounts, 57, 342nn20–21; textbooks, 51–53, 67–69, 312, 340n7
Pitt, William, the Younger, 255
Plymouth, Massachusetts, 83
Popular Cyclopedia of History, 57
popular sovereignty, 92–93, 165–70, 263, 283, 297; Adams and, 167–70; Declaration of Independence, 125; England’s Glorious Revolution, 40
Portsmouth, New Hampshire, 25
Portsmouth Journal of Literature and Politics, 59
post-Yorktown War. See Indians; westward expansion; Yorktown, British defeat at
“Powder Alarm,†81
Prescott, Samuel, 15, 20, 23, 312–13, 332n31, 333n33
Prescott, William, 189, 193–94, 199–200, 372n25, 372n27, 373n28
presidential selection and the electoral college, 149–50, 363n21
Progressive-era historians, 22, 92, 144, 236, 375–76n19
Pulling, John, 18
Putnam, Israel: and Battle of Bunker Hill, 158, 198–200, 371n22, 372n25, 372n27, 373n28; as Founding Father, 158
Putnam, Rufus, 395n6
Pybus, Cassandra, 221, 373n3
Pyle, Howard, 122
Quakers, 103
Quarles, Benjamin, 214–15, 216, 374–75n14, 376n28
Quincy, Josiah, 46, 337–38n42
Ramsay, David, 284–85, 289, 329n3; on Samuel Adams, 41; on black patriots and the Revolution, 210, 376n21; on brutality of the Revolution in the South, 232, 237; on Bunker Hill, 197–98; on campaign against Cherokees, 268; on Declaration of Independence, 130, 131; on Massachusetts Revolution, 90; on Paul Revere’s ride, 12; on post-Yorktown War, 257; on Valley Forge winter, 114, 115–16
Rand, Elizabeth, 20
Randolph, Edmund, 147–48, 363n25
ratification debates, 131, 143, 369n16
Read, George, 144–45, 160
Reading, Massachusetts, 20
Reconstruction (post-Civil War), 143, 211
Red Dawn at Lexington (Birnbaum), 34, 372n27
Redcoats. See British brutality, myth of
Reed, Joseph, 108
Regnier, Claude, 204
Regulators, 94, 303–4, 395n8
representation debates and small-state and large-state divide, 144–50, 361n7, 362n14, 362n17, 363n20
Revere, Paul, 157; capture
and detention of, 11–12, 14; death of, 14. See also Revere, Paul, ride of
Revere, Paul, ride of, 4, 9–26, 88–89, 296, 312–13; Adams and, 11, 13, 18, 89, 296; folklore of, 10–15; historians and legend, 13–15, 17–21, 22, 333n33; Longfellow and, 4, 9–11, 15–25, 331n28, 395n2; textbooks, 21–24, 312–13, 331n28, 332n32, 333n35
“revolution,†definitions of, 40, 291–92, 348n10
Richmond, Virginia, 175
Rockingham, Lord, 245
Rodat, Robert, 208, 227
Ross, Betsy, 49, 343n29
Ross, George, 282
Rotch, Francis, 35, 335n22, 335n24
Rowe, John, 44
Rush, Benjamin, 167, 282
Rush, Richard, 116
Russell, Francis, 373n28
Russia, 252
Rutledge, John, 153
Salem, Massachusetts, 83–84, 87
Salem, Peter, 217, 221
Salisbury, Stephen, 80
Sam Adams: Pioneer in Propaganda (Miller), 41–42
Sampson, Deborah, 49, 341n10
Sanderson, Elijah, 19
Sanderson, John, 159, 289
Saratoga, Battle of, 112, 250, 315
Scammell, Alexander, 374–75n14
Schaumann, Merri Lou, 343n21
Scott, Deborah, 228
SEATO (Southeast Asia Treaty Organization), 259
Second Continental Congress, 125. See also Continental Congress
Second Treatise on Government (Locke), 125, 355n3
Seneca Indians, 265–66, 272
Seven Years’ War, 252. See also French and Indian War
Shakers, 194
Shawnee Indians, 266–67
Shays, Daniel, 303–4, 395n6
Shays’ Rebellion, 40, 93–94, 303–4
Shelby, Evan, 237
Shelby, Isaac, 231
Sherman, Roger, 159–60
“shot heard ’round the world,†4, 75–77, 84, 87, 94–95, 249, 301. See also Lexington, Battle of
Shy, John, 97, 102, 279, 377n30
Sierra Leone, 221, 222–23
Sketches of the Life and Character of Patrick Henry (Wirt), 178
slave importation debate, 151–53, 369n16
slaves and slavery, 205–23; actual experiences in the Revolution and post-War, 209; Continental Congress, 206–8, 217, 365n8; Dunmore’s proclamation of freedom, 205, 211, 212–13, 216–18; enslaved people who fled to the British, 205, 210–13, 216–21, 373n3–213, 376n21; Federal Convention and slave importation debate, 151–53, 369n16; Federal Convention and three-fifths compromise, 150–53, 363n22; Founders as slave owners/defenders, 134–37, 151–53, 204, 207–8, 215–17, 221–23; Henry and, 368n14, 369–70n16; historians on, 210–15, 374n14, 375n19, 376nn20–21; Jefferson and, 134–37, 359n41, 373n3, 393–94n2; Lincoln and, 134–37; Maroon communities, 221; myth of patriotic slaves, 205–23; Northern/Southern differences in story of, 215–20, 377n30; notions of equality in the Declaration, 130–31, 134–37, 359n40; The Patriot (film), 205–9, 218–19; textbooks, 212, 216–19, 311, 377n31, 378n45; Virginia uprisings, 181–84. See also black patriots, myth of
Smith, James, 160, 282
Smithsonian Institution, 209, 306
Snowden, Richard, 91
Sons of Liberty, 46, 339n58
South, Revolutionary War in: as civil war, 228–39, 248, 258; Indian resistance, 267–69
South Carolina: brutality of Revolution in, 229, 239; Federal Convention delegation, 152–53, 362n14; Great Compromise debates, 362n14; and patriot campaigns against Indians, 268; slavery, 152–53, 205–9, 211, 373n3; three-fifths compromise, 152–53
Soviet Bloc, 259
Soviet Union, 179
Spain and the American Revolution, 250–51, 389n32
Sparks, Jared, 290, 293
Springfield, Massachusetts, 83, 94
St. Andrews Lodge of Freemasons, 46
St. Thomas Jenifer, Daniel of, 160
Stamp Act, 184–85, 303
Stamp Act riots, 31, 33–34, 45, 334n16
Stearns, Junius Brutus, 204
Steuben, Baron Friedrich Wilhelm von, 103, 112
Stevens, Elisha, 192
Stewart, Charles, 180–81
Stiles, Eb., 13
Stiles, Ezra, 130
Stoneham, Massachusetts, 20
Stowe, Harriet Beecher, 210
Stryker, William, 64, 341n14
Stuart, Henry, 267–68
Sullivan, John, 265–66, 272–75, 386n6, 388n34, 389n36
Summary View of the Rights of British American (Jefferson), 127–28
Sumner, George, 9
Sumter, Thomas (the “Gamecockâ€), 159, 207, 239, 288–89
Swain, Rev. George, 62
Sylvester, Richard, 32–33, 42, 317, 334n12
Tarleton, Banastre: and brutal civil war in the South, 227–28, 234, 237, 238, 239; and Waxhaws massacre, 190–91, 228–29, 379n2
Taunton, Massachusetts, 83
Taylor, George, 282
testing, standardized, 316–17
Tewksbury, Massachusetts, 19–20
textbooks. See history textbooks
Thacher, James, 341n15
They Called Her Molly Pitcher, 69, 347n54
Thompson, D. W., 343n21, 344n33
Thomson, Charles, 3–4, 282, 329n3
Thornton, Matthew, 282, 390n5
three-fifths compromise, 150–53, 363n22
Tilden, Samuel, 363n21
Topps American Heritage Heroes series, 69
Tories, 307; and Samuel Adams, 30–33, 42, 44, 47; and brutality of the Revolution in the South, 229–39; and Waxhaws massacre, 229
Treaty of Paris (1783), 222, 266, 269–71, 275, 276
Trull, Captain John, 19–20
Trumbull, John, 3, 27–29, 133, 156, 200–201, 242; The Death of General Warren at the Battle of Bunker’s Hill, 27–29, 200–201; Declaration of Independence, 4 July 1776, 3, 329n2
Tucker, St. George, 178–80, 230
Tudor, William, 194
Tufts, Samuel, 20
Tuscarora Indians, 265
Underground Railroad, 221
United Nations, 259
U.S. History in a Global Context (Oxford University Press), 261
Valley Forge, winter at, 99–120, 326; battlefield casualties, 101, 351n2; commemorations, 118; Continental Army, 91–120; deaths from disease, 113; desertions, 104–6, 109; and Hard Winter in Morristown, 107–13, 117, 266, 353n36; historians and, 114–19, 354n49; mutinies and other resistance, 104–7; patient suffering, 101, 105, 112–13, 114–20, 285, 289; pillaging, 103–4, 106; temperatures, 107–8, 352n21, 353n24; textbook histories, 99, 116–17, 118–19; and true hardships, 101–7, 111–17; Washington and myth of, 113–14
Valley Forge National Historical Park, 118
Vermont, 130, 218
veterans of the Revolutionary War, 116, 289
veto, executive, 39, 300
Vietnam War, 170, 248
Vincennes, Battle of, 274
Virginia: Dunmore and Revolution in, 181–84; Federal Convention delegation, 144–50, 152–53, 362n14; Great Compromise debates, 144–50, 362n14; Hard Winter in, 108; and Massachusetts Revolution, 91, 347n9; planters, 347n9; slavery, 152–53, 181–84, 369n16, 373n3, 394n2; three-fifths compromise, 152–53
Virginia Convention, 126, 131, 175–77, 356n8; Henry’s “liberty or death†speech, 4, 131, 175–81, 186–87, 296, 314
Virginia Declaration of Rights
, 124, 125–29, 130–31, 313, 356n8, 359n40, 369n16
Virginia House of Burgesses, 184–85, 347n9
Virginia’s Monthly Magazine and Literary Journal, 116
visual arts and the American Revolution, 2–3; Samuel Adams, 28; Battle of Bunker Hill, 188, 200–201; Battle of Lexington, 74; Cornwallis’s surrender at Yorktown, 242; Declaration of Independence signing, 133, 156; Fourth of July activities, 280; Jefferson and Declaration of Independence, 122, 133; Life of George Washington the Farmer, 204; Molly Pitcher, 50, 50, 51–52, 60, 340n8; Paul Revere’s Ride, 8; Washington and his slaves, 204; Washington Crossing the Delaware, xii, 3; westward expansion, 262; winter at Valley Forge, 100
Wade, Benjamin, 136
Waldo, Albigence, 55, 341nn14–15
Waln, Robert, 159
War of 1812, 116, 289
Warren, James, 39, 46, 88–89, 285
Warren, James Otis, 285
Warren, Joseph, 158; and Samuel Adams, 27–29, 37–38; and Massachusetts Revolution, 88, 90, 91; and Paul Revere’s ride, 11–13, 17–18, 333n33
Warren, Mercy Otis, 284–85; on Samuel Adams, 47–48; on brutality of the Revolutionary War, 233–34, 237; on Bunker Hill, 198; on Jefferson and Declaration of Independence, 132, 358n24; on the Massachusetts Revolution, 89, 90; on post-Yorktown War and global context, 257; on Valley Forge winter, 114–15
Washington, George: and black soldiers, 206–8, 217; and British offers of peace, 245–46; on the Constitution, 154; and Continental Army, 70, 104–14, 206–8, 217, 243–49, 307, 354n39, 397–98n13; Federal Convention debates, 147, 154; and female camp followers, 51, 70; as Founding Father, 157, 158, 161, 170, 221; and Great Compromise, 147; Hard Winter in Morristown, 107–13, 353n36; and Molly Pitcher story, 51, 53, 58, 67, 69; post-Yorktown War, 243–49, 381n11, 381n13; slave ownership, 204, 207–8, 221–23; and Sullivan’s campaign against the Indians, 389n36; and Valley Forge myth, 113–14; Weems’s biography, 116, 287–88
Washington, Harry, 221–23, 378n45
Watertown, Massachusetts, 64, 87
Watson, Abraham, 18
Waxhaws incident, 190–91, 228–29, 379n2
Wayne, “Mad Anthony,†271, 345n33
Webster, Daniel, 367n22
Webster, Noah, 4, 199, 257, 290
Weems, Mason Locke, 286–88; as early popular historian, 286–88, 392n25; on Israel Putnam and Battle of Bunker Hill, 198–99, 371n22; on post-Yorktown War, 257; on Valley Forge winter, 116, 119; Washington biography, 116, 287–88