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Sunday, September 22, 2024

Revolutionary America - Book Group to be held May 5

American

City of Brigham recently issued the following announcement.

Revolutionary America - Book Group

When:

May 5, 2022

Time:

7:00 pm

Where:

Brigham City Public Library

26 E Forest St

Contact:

(435) 723-5850

Details:

Join the Library’s monthly reading and discussion series addressing topics in history and the humanities. Discussions are led by guest scholars. Books may be picked up from the Library's front desk during regular business hours.

This program has received funding from Utah Humanities (UH). UH improves communities through active engagement in the humanities.

Peter Oliver's Origin & Progress of the American Rebellion: A Tory View by Peter Oliver.

Scholar: Nathan Rives, PhD, WSU.

One difficulty in writing a balanced history of the American Revolution arises in part from its success as a creator of our nation and our nationalistic sentiment. Unlike the Civil War, unlike the French Revolution, the American Revolution produced no lingering social trauma in the United States-it is a historic event widely applauded by Americans today as both necessary and desirable. But one consequence of this happy unanimity is that the chief losers of the War of Independence-the American Loyalists-have fared badly at the hands of historians. This explains, in part, why the account of the Revolution recorded by self-professed Loyalist and Chief Justice of the Superior Court of Massachusetts, Peter Oliver, has heretofore been so routinely overlooked. Oliver's manuscript, entitled "The Origins & Progress of the American Rebellion," written in 1781, challenges the motives of the founding fathers, and depicts the revolution as passion, plotting, and violence. His descriptions of the leaders of the patriot party, of their program and motives, are unforgiving, bitter, and inevitably partisan. But it records the impressions of one who had experienced these events, knew most of the combatants intimately, and saw the collapse of the society he had lived in. His history is a very important contemporary account of the origins of the revolution in Massachusetts, and is now presented here in it entirety for the first time.

Original source can be found here.

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