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"A readable and tightly argued political and social biography that
provides numerous insights into Massachusetts' history on the eve
of the revolution." "A candid and readable biography . . . [Walmsley] gives a vivid
account of the descent of a controversial and sometimes
misunderstood figure of the period." "Usefully emphasizes the economic and personal influences on the
politics of Massachusetts." "A significant addition. Hutchinson definitely needed a more
complete treatment than he heretofore had received and Walmsley has
neatly provided it. A genuine pleasure to read." "Given the enduring fascination of the American Revolution, this
fine biography of Thomas Hutchinson should find a wide and
appreciative audience. Historian Stephen Walmsely's persuasive
study of the loyalist governor of Massachusetts Bay portrays an
honorable but unimaginative official who remains true to his
aristocratic conception of duty but helpless to arrest the forces
wrenching his native land away from Crown rule. Putting a human
face on an epic conflict, Walmsley finds hutchinson's radical
opponents motivated less by ideas and principles than by ambition,
greed, and personal animus. Indeed, Walmsley's graphic description
of the mob violence, deployed by the patriots to intimidate
Hutchinson and subvert the rule of law, will leave readers
pondering who were the villains and who the heroes in this superb
reconsideration of the nation's origins." Rarely in Americanhistory has a political figure been so pilloried and despised as Thomas Hutchinson, Governor of Massachusetts and an ardent loyalist of the Crown in the days leading up to the American revolution. In this narrative and analytic life of Hutchinson, the first since Bernard Bailyn's Pulitzer-Prize-winning biography a quarter century ago, Andrew Stephen Walmsley traces Hutchinson's decline from well- respected member of Boston's governing class to America's leading object of revolutionary animus. Walmsley argues that Hutchinson, rather than simply a victim of his inability to understand the passions associated with a revolutionary movement, was in fact defeated in a classic political and personal struggle for power. No mere sycophant for the British, Hutchinson was keenly aware of how much he had to lose if revolutionary forces prevailed, which partially explains his evolution from near- Whig to intransigent loyalist. His consequent vilification became a vehicle through which the growing patriot movement sought to achieve legitimacy. An entertaining and thought-provoking view of revolutionary events from the perspective of the losing side, Thomas Hutchinson and the Origins of the American Revolution tells the story of the American Revolution through the prism of one of its most famous detractors.
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