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Soldiers' Revolution: Pennsylvanians in Arms and the Forging of Early American Identity PDF

337 Pages·2003·8.62 MB·English
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Knouff.Front 10/28/03 6:47 PM Page i The Soldiers’ Revolution Knouff.Front 10/28/03 6:47 PM Page ii Image not available Knouff.Front 10/28/03 6:47 PM Page iii Gregory T. Knouff The Soldiers’ Revolution PENNSYLVANIANS IN ARMS AND THE FORGING OF EARLY AMERICAN IDENTITY The Pennsylvania State University Press University Park, Pennsylvania Knouff.Front 10/28/03 6:47 PM Page iv Disclaimer: Some images in the original version of this book are not available for inclusion in the eBook. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Knouff, Gregory T., 1966– The soldiers’ revolution : Pennsylvanians in arms and the forging of early American identity / Gregory T. Knouff p. cm. Includes bibliographical references (p. ) and index ISBN 0-271-02335-X (cloth : alk. paper) 1.Soldiers—Pennsylvania—History—18th century. 2.Pennsylvania—History—Revolution, 1775–1783—Influence. 3.United States—History—Revolution, 1775–1783—Influence. 4.Pennsylvania—History—1775–1865. I. Title. E263.P4K57 2003 973.3’448—dc22 2003022422 Copyright © 2004The Pennsylvania State University All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America Published by The Pennsylvania State University Press, University Park, PA 16802-1003 The Pennsylvania State University Press is a member of the Association of American University Presses. It is the policy of The Pennsylvania State University Press to use acid-free paper. Publications on uncoated stock satisfy the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Material, ANSI Z39.48–1992. Frontispiece: A Revolutionary-era German drawing of an American rifleman and a Continental soldier from Pennsylvania. The Historical Society of Pennsylvania (hsp), Stauffer Collection, attributed to D. Chodwiecki. Knouff.Front 10/28/03 6:47 PM Page v contents Acknowledgments vii Abbreviations ix Introduction xi 1 Conflict and Community on the Eve of Revolution 1 2 Why They Fought 35 3 Identity and the Military Community 77 4 The Meaning of the War Against the British 119 5 Race and Violence on the Frontier 155 6 Civil War and the Contest for Community 195 7 The Memory of the American Revolution 233 Conclusion 273 Essay on Sources and Methodology 287 Index 297 v Knouff.Front 10/28/03 6:47 PM Page vi Knouff.Front 10/28/03 6:47 PM Page vii acknowledgments My greatest intellectual debt is to my graduate school mentor, Thomas P. Slaughter. His scholarly brilliance and enthusiasm for doing the work of pro- fessional history were inspiring. I thank him for the fine training I received under his guidance at Rutgers University. Tom and many other historians have provided useful critiques of parts, incarnations, and the whole of this mono- graph over the span of more years than I care to recall. Anything valuable in this study is due to their help; the problems that remain are my sole responsi- bility. Thanks to Stephen Aron, Wayne Bodle, Jean Boydston, John Chambers, Robert Churchill, Paul Clemens, Richard Dunn, John Frantz, Sara Gronim, Susan Klepp, Mark E. Lender, James McPherson, Jacqueline Miller, John Murrin, William Pencak, Elizabeth Perkins, Daniel Richter, Carroll Smith- Rosenberg, Jean Soderlund, and Marianne S. Wokeck. I must express, too, my special appreciation of Peter Messer’s close friendship over the years and his incredibly helpful critical reading of the entire manuscript. Our conversations also provided much-needed comic relief when we both pondered how to remain sane in sometimes insane circumstances. I am deeply indebted to Peter Potter of The Pennsylvania State Uni- versity Press for both his interest in my work and his consummate professional- ism as a skilled editor. I thank Laura Reed-Morrisson for her superb copyediting of the manuscript. Thanks also to the readers for the Press, Ronald Schultz and Charles Neimeyer, for their close readings of the manuscript and very helpful suggestions. Various librarians and archivists facilitated my work. Foremost among them is my good friend David Fowler, the former director of the David Library of the American Revolution, who read and commented upon this project and vii Knouff.Front 10/28/03 6:47 PM Page viii viii acknowledgments introduced me to the library’s fine holdings. Indeed, the David Library is the preeminent single repository for the study of the American Revolutionary era, and most of my research was conducted there. I would also like to acknowledge the assistance rendered me by the staffs of the Alexander Library at Rutgers University, the American Philosophical Society, the Darlington Memorial Library at the University of Pittsburgh, the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, the Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania, and the Library Company of Philadelphia. Additionally, I would like to thank the David Library of the American Revolution, the McNeil (then Philadelphia) Center for Early American Stud- ies, and the Rutgers Center for Historical Analysis for fellowships that allowed me to conduct vital research. They also furnished collegial forums for intellec- tual exchange. Keene State College provided me with a course release to work on writing the book. It is my privilege to work with extraordinarily fine colleagues in the history department at Keene State. In particular, I would like to thank David Stowell and Matthew Crocker for commenting on parts of this book. David Price closely (and painfully) read the entire manuscript when it was a six-hundred- page monster and offered helpful suggestions. Curiously, his usual response— “burn it”—was not among them. I cannot overemphasize my appreciation for the close friendship and tireless support of the chair of my department, Andrew Wilson. I have never known a more gifted intellectual, able leader, or selfless friend. Versions of Chapter 5of this book appear in essay form in “Soldiers and Violence on the Pennsylvania Frontier,” in Beyond Philadelphia: The American Revolution in the Pennsylvania Hinterland, ed. John Frantz and William Pencak (University Park, Pa., 1998), and “Constructing a Revolutionary Racial Fron- tier: Whiteness, Warfare, and Early American National Identity,” in Friends and Enemies in Penn’s Woods, ed. William A. Pencak and Daniel K. Richter (forth- coming from The Pennsylvania State University Press). In addition, my article “‘An Arduous Service’: The Pennsylvania Backcountry Soldiers’ Revolution,” Pennsylvania History61(January 1994): 45–74, contains early versions of some of my analysis in Chapters 2and 5. In the end, my greatest gratitude goes to my wife, Beth Staudt, who shared her life with me through it all. I thank her and our newborn son, Steffen Byron Knouff, for showing me the things in life that really matter. Knouff.Front 10/28/03 6:47 PM Page ix abbreviations AO12 Records of the American Loyalist Claims Commission, 1776–1831, Public Records Office, Great Britain, Audit Office 12 AO13 American Loyalist Claims Commission Papers, 1780–1835, Public Records Office, Great Britain, Audit Office 13 DLAR David Library of the American Revolution, Washington Crossing, Pennsylvania DMC Draper Manuscript Collection, State Historical Society of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin HSP Historical Society of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania LCP Library Company of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania NYHS New-York Historical Society, New York, New York PA Samuel Hazard et al., eds., Pennsylvania Archives (Philadelphia and Harrisburg, 1852–) PCC Papers of the Continental Congress, 1774–1789, National Archives, Washington, D.C. PMHB Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography PRG Records of Pennsylvania’s Revolutionary Governments, 1775–1790, Record Group 27, Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commis- sion, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania RG-2 Auditor General, Revolutionary War Pension File, 1809–1893, Record Group 2, Pennsylvania State Archives, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania RWPF Revolutionary War Pension and Bounty-Land-Warrant Application Files (M804), National Archives, Washington, D.C. WMQ William and Mary Quarterly ix

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What did the American Revolution mean to the ordinary soldiers who fought in it? Were they inspired by high-minded ideals of liberty and democracy, or were they seeking the material and practical rewards--bounties, land, and political advancement--that victory might bring them? We know much about th
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