A Leap in the Dark The Struggle to Create the American Republic

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Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2004-10-28
Publisher(s): Oxford University Press
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Summary

It was an age of fascinating leaders and difficult choices, of grand ideas eloquently expressed and of epic conflicts bitterly fought. Now comes a brilliant portrait of the American Revolution, one that is compelling in its prose, fascinating in its details, and provocative in its freshinterpretations. In A Leap in the Dark, John Ferling offers a magisterial new history that surges from the first rumblings of colonial protest to the volcanic election of 1800. Ferling's swift-moving narrative teems with fascinating details. We see Benjamin Franklin trying to decide if his loyalty was to GreatBritain or to America, and we meet George Washington when he was a shrewd planter-businessman who discovered personal economic advantages to American independence. We encounter those who supported the war against Great Britain in 1776, but opposed independence because it was a "leap in the dark."Following the war, we hear talk in the North of secession from the United States. The author offers a gripping account of the most dramatic events of our history, showing just how closely fought were the struggle for independence, the adoption of the Constitution, and the later battle betweenFederalists and Democratic-Republicans. Yet, without slowing the flow of events, he has also produced a landmark study of leadership and ideas. Here is all the erratic brilliance of Hamilton and Jefferson battling to shape the new nation, and here too is the passion and political shrewdness ofrevolutionaries, such as Samuel Adams and Patrick Henry, and their Loyalist counterparts, Joseph Galloway and Thomas Hutchinson. Here as well are activists who are not so well known today, men like Abraham Yates, who battled for democratic change, and Theodore Sedgwick, who fought to preserve thepolitical and social system of the colonial past. Ferling shows that throughout this period the epic political battles often resembled today's politics and the politicians--the founders--played a political hardball attendant with enmities, selfish motivations, and bitterness. The political stakes,this book demonstrates, were extraordinary: first to secure independence, then to determine the meaning of the American Revolution. John Ferling has shown himself to be an insightful historian of our Revolution, and an unusually skillful writer. A Leap in the Dark is his masterpiece, work that provokes, enlightens, and entertains in full measure.

Author Biography


John Ferling is a Professor of History at the State University of West Georgia. A familiar face in history documentaries on television, he has written numerous books, including John Adams: A Life, The First of Men: A Life of George Washington, and Setting the World Ablaze: Washington, Adams, and Jefferson in the American Revolution.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations and Maps
ix
Preface xi
1754-1763 ``Join, or Die''
1(22)
1763-1766 ``A Loss of Respect and Affection''
23(30)
1766-1770 ``To Crush the Spirit of the Colonies''
53(34)
1770-1774 ``The Cause of Boston Now Is the Cause of America''
87(36)
1775-1776 ``To Die Freemen Rather Than to Live Slaves''
123(44)
1776-1777 ``A Leap Into the Dark''
167(42)
1778-1782 ``This Wilderness of Darkness & Dangers''
209(38)
1783-1787 ``The Present Paroxysm of Our Affairs''
247(34)
1787-1789 ``So Much Unanimity and Good Will''
281(34)
1790-1793 ``Prosperous at Home, Respectable Abroad''
315(40)
1793-1796 ``A Colossus to the Antirepublican Party''
355(50)
1797-1799 ``A Game Where Principles Are the Stake''
405(46)
1799-1801 ``The Gigg Is Up''
451(26)
1801 ``An Age of Revolution and Reformation''
477(12)
Abbreviations 489(4)
Notes 493(46)
Index 539

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