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1774 by Mary Beth Norton
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1774

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1774 by Mary Beth Norton
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Feb 11, 2020 | ISBN 9780593169995 | 987 Minutes

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  • Feb 11, 2020 | ISBN 9780593169995

    987 Minutes

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Praise

“[Norton] does not fundamentally challenge the traditional trajectory of events in that decisive year. What she does do is enrich the narrative, filling in the story with a staggering amount of detail based on prodigious research in an enormous number of archives. . . . She wants to re-create as much as possible the past reality of this momentous year in all of its particularity. Only then, she suggests, will we come to appreciate the complexity of what happened and to understand all of the conflicts, divisions, and confusion that lay behind events, like the Tea Party, that historians highlight and simplify. . . . She seems to have read every newspaper in the period, and she delights in describing the give and take of debates between patriots and loyalists that took place in the press.” –Gordon S. Wood, The Wall Street Journal

“Norton accomplishes something more than a revision of the traditional story of the coming of the American Revolution. She reminds us that even when it seemed inevitable that continuing protest would lead to violent confrontation with British troops, there were intelligent, articulate people in America who wanted desperately to head off the crisis.” —New York Review of Books

“This was a world on the verge. Though every era writes its own history of the American Revolution, and this one is written from our world on the verge, Mary Beth Norton’s 1774 is neither a celebratory account nor a cautionary tale. The Revolution is told not just from the perspective of Boston or Philadelphia, but from a more capacious and complex early America, a vital history of a vital time, told with an unflinching eye for the telling details and sometimes agonizing missteps that took Americans into war and independence. A brilliant book, by one of the very most insightful and significant historians of our time.” –Karin Wulf, executive director of the Omohundro Institute of Early American History & Culture and professor of History at William & Mary

“Meticulous and persuasive. . . . Norton brings underappreciated figures such as Pennsylvania lawyer John Dickinson to the fore, and elucidates complex developments in all 13 colonies. This ambitious deep dive will remind readers that America has a long history of building consensus out of fractious disputes.” —Publishers Weekly

“Many assume a clear, straightforward trajectory from the Tea Act and Tea Party to independence. But Norton’s elegant, learned account shows otherwise . . . a crisp, persuasive narrative of the collapse of British rule and the decisive movement for independence.” –Richard D. Brown, author of Self-Evident Truths

“Deeply researched. . . . Norton makes a good case for considering 1774 and not 1776 to be the foundational year of the new republic.” —Kirkus

Awards

George Washington Book Prize WINNER 2021

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