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This book examines how the moral sentiment of gratitude, as
expressed in the image of the suffering soldier, transformed the
memory of the Revolutionary War, political culture, and public
policy in the early American republic. This popular depiction
removed the stigma of vice and treason from the Continental Army,
legitimized the army as a republican institution, and credited it
with securing independence. By glorifying the now aged,
impoverished, and infirm Continental soldiers as republican
warriors, the image also accentuated the nation's guilt for its
ingratitude toward the veterans. Using Peterborough, New Hampshire,
as a case study, John P. Resch shows that the power of the
suffering soldier image lay partly in its reflection of reality.
The citizen-soldiers from Peterborough who fought in the
Continental Army did indeed represent a cross-section of the town,
and they experienced greater postwar deprivation and alienation
than their peers who had not gone to war. Personal and political
sympathy toward the veterans eventually led to the passage of the
Revolutionary War Pension Act in 1818. The War Department further
validated the soldiers' claims and public gratitude through its
liberal administration of the pension program, which attracted more
than 20,000 applications.
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