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This Author: Christopher F. Minty
This Narrator: Ray Montecalvo
This Publisher: University Press Audiobooks

Unfriendly to Liberty by Christopher F. Minty

Unfriendly to Liberty

Loyalist Networks and the Coming of the American Revolution in New York City

by Christopher F. Minty


Title Details

Narrator
 
Unabridged Edition
Running Time
11 Hrs. 28 Min.

Description

In Unfriendly to Liberty, Christopher F. Minty explores the origins of loyalism in New York City between 1768 and 1776, and revises our understanding of the coming of the American Revolution.

Through detailed analyses of those who became loyalists, Minty argues that would-be loyalists came together long before Lexington and Concord to form an organized, politically motivated, and inclusive political group that was centered around the DeLancey faction. Following the DeLanceys' election to the New York Assembly in 1768, these men, elite and nonelite, championed an inclusive political economy that advanced the public good, and they strongly protested Parliament's reorientation of the British Empire.

For New York loyalists, it was local politics, factions, institutions, and behaviors that governed their political activities in the build up to the American Revolution. Indeed, local political alignments that were formed in the imperial crises of the 1760s and 1770s provided a critical platform for the divide between loyalists and patriots in New York City. Political and social disputes coming out of the Seven Years' War, more than republican radicalization in the 1770s, forged the united force that would make New York City a center of loyalism throughout the American Revolution.

The book is published by Cornell University Press. The audiobook is published by University Press Audiobooks.

"An excellent book...should reshape our sense of the foundations of US political culture." (Liam Riordan, University of Maine)

"Dazzling research, sharp insights, and gripping narrative...provides a new vantage point..." (Benjamin L. Carp, Brooklyn College)

"Offers a fascinating and fine-grained explanation of the process by which the city's heated partisan politics turned into irreconcilable differences." (Serena Zabin, Carleton College)


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