Prisoners of Congress : Philadelphia's Quakers in Exile, 1777-1778

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Prisoners of Congress : Philadelphia's Quakers in Exile, 1777-1778

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  • 製本 Paperback:紙装版/ペーパーバック版/ページ数 288 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9780271103303
  • DDC分類 973.30882896

Full Description

Prisoners of Congress uncovers a forgotten Revolutionary War story with startling resonance today. In 1777, the Continental Congress condemned Quakers as an internal threat to the new republic and recommended the preventive detention of them, revealing how quickly fear and wartime urgency could turn neighbors into suspects.

This compelling narrative follows four Philadelphia-area families as they are swept into political crisis. Drawing on letters, diaries, and official records, Norman E. Donoghue II tells the story of seventeen Quakers, who, based on suspicion alone, were forcibly removed from Pennsylvania and imprisoned in Virginia. Stripped of habeas corpus protections and denied the chance to defend themselves, the exiles became what Donoghue identifies as the nation's first political prisoners. Through personal stories of loyalty, conscience, and survival, the book brings readers inside a dramatic episode that is a cautionary tale for any democracy under pressure.

Vividly written and deeply researched, Prisoners of Congress speaks to readers interested in the American Revolution while offering fresh insight for scholars of individual liberties and US political and constitutional history. Revealing the nation's first political prisoners, it challenges founding myths and invites reconsideration of how liberty and intolerance exist side-by-side.

Contents

List of Illustrations

Acknowledgements

List of Abbreviations

Dramatis Personae: The Quaker Exiles of 1777-1778, Their Nemeses, and the Women's Mission

Introduction

1. Quaker Rebellion

2. Quaker Refusals

3. Friends as Enemies

4. Quaker Arrests

5. Peaceable Caravan

6. Virginia Exiles

7. Quaker Home Front

8. Quaker Peace Mission

9. Quaker Ordeals

10. Winter Stress

11. Shadow of Death

12. "Entirely an Act of Our Own"

13. "Able Politicians"

14. Release and Return

Coda: Reintegration, or Not

Epilogue

Homage

Appendix A: Combined Timeline of the Quaker Exile (September 11, 1777-April 30, 1778) amid the Philadelphia Campaign (August 25, 1777-June 18, 1778), Including Governance of the City

Appendix B: Israel Pemberton et al., [Protest] "To the President and Council of Pennsylvania," September 8, 1777

Appendix C: The Women's Petition, April 1778

Notes

Bibliography

Index

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