American Revolution at 250

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1776
1776 Commission
1976
2026
250th
Abigail Adams
America's birthday
American historians
American republic
bicentennial
British empire
Category=NHB
Category=NHK
celebration
citizen soldier
commemoration
Declaration of Independence
democracy
disease
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eq_history
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eq_non-fiction
founding fathers
freedom
George Rogers Clark
George Washington
historiography
home front
James Madison
John Adams
Lexington and Concord
liberty
loyalism
Loyalists
memory
military veterans
Mount Vernon
Museum of the American Revolution
Native Americans
patriotism
patriots
peaceful transfer of power
republican motherhood
revolutionary war
Semiquincentennial
slavery
smallpox
social conflict
statue removal
the constitution
Thomas Jefferson
Thomas Paine
transfer of power
United States
US Constitution
War of Independence

Product details

  • ISBN 9780813954622
  • Weight: 545g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 03 Apr 2026
  • Publisher: University of Virginia Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The preeminent historians of the founding era speak their mind on the anniversary of the United States' birth

In these powerful and personal essays, some of the most celebrated historians of the American Revolutionary era reflect on the meaning of 1776 to the nation in 2026, offering fresh insights and food for thought on every page. They tackle the most pressing topics that Americans debated in 1776 and continue to debate today: the meaning of democracy; the nature of information wars; immigration and the rights and obligations of citizenship; race and slavery; public health; the various and conflicting legacies of the founders; and the shifting nature of commemoration itself. Like the Revolutionary generation they know so well, on some issues these scholarly authorities find themselves largely in accord; on others they vehemently disagree. This is historical debate at its most urgent.

Contributors: Allison Bigelow * T. H. Breen * Katherine Carté * Lindsay M. Chervinsky * Marlene L. Daut * Andrew M. Davenport * Christa Dierksheide * Lauren Duval * Joanne B. Freeman * Annette Gordon-Reed * Eliga H. Gould * Patrick Griffin * Nicholas Guyatt * Ricardo A. Herrera * Woody Holton * Brendan McConville * Michael A. McDonnell * Peter S. Onuf * Robert G. Parkinson * Teresa R. Pollak * John A. Ragosta * Bertrand Van Ruymbeke * Rosemarie Zagarri

Francis D. Cogliano is Professor of American History at the University of Edinburgh and the author of A Revolutionary Friendship: Washington, Jefferson, and the American Republic.