The Romantics

The Romantics

Author: Galt Niederhoffer

Publisher: Macmillan

Published: 2008-07-08

Total Pages: 296

ISBN-13: 9780312373375

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The author of the acclaimed "A Taxonomy of Barnacles" returns with an elegantoffering about a group of college friends who reunite for a wedding in Maine.288 pp.


In Byron's Wake

In Byron's Wake

Author: Miranda Seymour

Publisher: Simon and Schuster

Published: 2018-11-06

Total Pages: 445

ISBN-13: 1681779366

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In 1815, the clever and courted Annabella Milbanke married the notorious and brilliant Lord Byron. Just one year later, she fled, taking with her their baby daughter, Ada Lovelace. Byron himself escaped into exile and died as a revolutionary hero in 1824. Brought up by a mother who became one of the most progressive reformers of Victorian England, Byron’s little girl was introduced to mathematics as a means of calming her wild spirits. As a child invalid, Ada dreamed of building a steam-driven flying horse. As an exuberant and boldly unconventional young woman, she amplified her explanations of Charles Babbage’s unbuilt calculating engine to predict the dawn of the modern computer age.During her life, Lady Byron was praised as a paragon of virtue; within ten years of her death, she was vilified as a disgrace to her sex. Well over a hundred years later, Annabella Milbanke is still perceived as a prudish wife and cruelly controlling mother. But her hidden devotion to Byron and her tender ambitions for his mercurial, brilliant daughter reveal a deeply complex but unexpectedly sympathetic personality.Drawing on fascinating new material, Seymour reveals the ways in which Byron, long after his death, continued to shape the lives and reputations both of his wife and his daughter.


Liberty’s Chain

Liberty’s Chain

Author: David N. Gellman

Publisher: Cornell University Press

Published: 2022-04-15

Total Pages: 332

ISBN-13: 1501715852

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In Liberty's Chain, David N. Gellman shows how the Jay family, abolitionists and slaveholders alike, embodied the contradictions of the revolutionary age. The Jays of New York were a preeminent founding family. John Jay, diplomat, Supreme Court justice, and coauthor of the Federalist Papers, and his children and grandchildren helped chart the course of the Early American Republic. Liberty's Chain forges a new path for thinking about slavery and the nation's founding. John Jay served as the inaugural president of a pioneering antislavery society. His descendants, especially his son William Jay and his grandson John Jay II, embraced radical abolitionism in the nineteenth century, the cause most likely to rend the nation. The scorn of their elite peers—and racist mobs—did not deter their commitment to end southern slavery and to combat northern injustice. John Jay's personal dealings with African Americans ranged from callousness to caring. Across the generations, even as prominent Jays decried human servitude, enslaved people and formerly enslaved people served in Jay households. Abbe, Clarinda, Caesar Valentine, Zilpah Montgomery, and others lived difficult, often isolated, lives that tested their courage and the Jay family's principles. The personal and the political intersect in this saga, as Gellman charts American values transmitted and transformed from the colonial and revolutionary eras to the Civil War, Reconstruction, and beyond. The Jays, as well as those who served them, demonstrated the elusiveness and the vitality of liberty's legacy. This remarkable family story forces us to grapple with what we mean by patriotism, conservatism, and radicalism. Their story speaks directly to our own divided times.


Wilberforce

Wilberforce

Author: Anne Stott

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Published: 2012-03-15

Total Pages: 355

ISBN-13: 0199699399

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Casts a fresh light on the abolitionist William Wilberforce and his friends in the Clapham sect by looking at their private lives as revealed in their family correspondence. Stott explores themes of the family, women and gender, childhood and education, sexuality, and intimacy.


Paternalism in a Southern City

Paternalism in a Southern City

Author: Edward J. Cashin

Publisher: University of Georgia Press

Published: 2012-02-01

Total Pages: 258

ISBN-13: 0820340944

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These essays look at southern social customs within a single city in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. In particular, the volume focuses on paternalism between masters and slaves, husbands and wives, elites and the masses, and industrialists and workers. How Augusta's millworkers, homemakers, and others resisted, exploited, or endured the constraints of paternalism reveals the complex interplay between race, class, and gender. One essay looks at the subordinating effects of paternalism on women in the Old South--slave, free black, and white--and the coping strategies available to each group. Another focuses on the Knights of Labor union in Augusta. With their trappings of chivalry, the Knights are viewed as a response by Augusta's white male millworkers to the emasculating "maternalism" to which they were subjected by their own wives and daughters and those of mill owners and managers. Millworkers are also the topic of a study of mission work in their communities, a study that gauges the extent to which religious outreach by elites was a means of social control rather than an outpouring of genuine concern for worker welfare. Other essays discuss Augusta's "aristocracy of color," who had to endure the same effronteries of segregation as the city's poorest blacks; the role of interracial cooperation in the founding of the Colored Methodist Episcopal Church as a denomination, and of Augusta's historic Trinity CME Church; and William Jefferson White, an African American minister, newspaper editor, and founder of Morehouse College. The varied and creative responses to paternalism discussed here open new ways to view relationships based on power and negotiated between men and women, blacks and whites, and the prosperous and the poor.


Robert Hutchins of Colonial America

Robert Hutchins of Colonial America

Author: Jack Randolph Hutchins

Publisher:

Published: 1992

Total Pages: 1368

ISBN-13:

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The first Hutchins name recorded in America was that of Robert Hutchins of the Jamestown colony of Virginia in 1628. Later on, he was known in the records as Robert Hutchinson. Includes the Pintard family. Surname is spelled Hutchins, Hutchings, Hutchens, Hutchin, Houchins and others.


NC Patriots 1775-1783: Their Own Words, Volume 2, Part 2

NC Patriots 1775-1783: Their Own Words, Volume 2, Part 2

Author: J.D. Lewis

Publisher: JD Lewis

Published:

Total Pages: 1162

ISBN-13: 1467548103

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This volume includes the names of almost 13,000 men who served in the NC State Troops and/or NC Militia during the American Revolution. Some men also served in the NC Continental Line. This list includes the person's home county, known officers, and known battles and skirmishes, if any.