Ordeal of Thomas Hutchinson

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18th century america
250th anniversary edition
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american historiography
american independence origins
american loyalists
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bernard bailyn
british empire and colonies
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colonial america
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founding era scholarship
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ideological origins of the american revolution
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loyalists and patriots
maya jasanoff foreword
national book award history
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patriots vs loyalists
political biography
political thought in the american revolution
pre revolutionary america
pulitzer prize winning historian
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the barbarous years
the ordeal of thomas hutchinson
thomas hutchinson biography
tories in america
transatlantic migration
us history classics
voyagers to the west

Product details

  • ISBN 9780674306233
  • Weight: 543g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Jul 2026
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Winner of the National Book Award

The classic political biography that reimagined Revolutionary history—in a new edition to honor America’s 250th year.


Thomas Hutchinson, governor of Massachusetts Bay during the restive years of 1771–1774, was the most distinguished colonial-born official in pre-Revolutionary America. He was also the most loathed. A loyalist, Hutchinson defended the legitimacy of Parliament’s rule and suffered the consequences, bearing the full weight of Patriot ire. By the eve of the Revolution, he was vilified as the man most responsible for Britain’s intolerable cruelties—not only a tyrant but a traitor.

The Ordeal of Thomas Hutchinson is Bernard Bailyn’s National Book Award–winning history of Hutchinson and the American loyalists who found themselves on the losing side of the Revolutionary War. Offering a dramatic account of the origins of American independence from the viewpoint of one of its most thoughtful opponents, Bailyn makes the loyalist position comprehensible and rehabilitates a deft statesman who was far from the demagogue imagined in Patriot propaganda. Hutchinson in fact shared many Patriot grievances and faithfully represented colonial public opinion to both Crown and Parliament. Yet he was forced from office and died in exile, broken and longing for his native New England.

Through a sympathetic yet balanced portrayal of one of the Revolution’s defeated voices, Bailyn reveals with singular clarity why the Revolution prevailed and how those who survived its upheaval came to grasp its transformative power. Published on the 250th anniversary of American independence, with a foreword from Maya Jasanoff, this new edition of Bailyn’s masterpiece marks a turning point in historiography, illuminating the overlooked dimensions of American history and the stories that shape nations.

Bernard Bailyn was a preeminent historian of early America and the Atlantic world. He was awarded the Pulitzer Prize twice, for The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution and Voyagers to the West, and received the National Book Award for The Ordeal of Thomas Hutchinson. At Harvard University, he served as Adams University Professor and James Duncan Phillips Professor of Early American History. Maya Jasanoff is the Coolidge Professor of History and X. D. and Nancy Yang Professor of Arts and Sciences at Harvard University, specializing in British imperial and global history. She is the author of Edge of Empire (Duff Cooper Prize), Liberty’s Exiles (National Book Critics Circle Award), and The Dawn Watch (Cundill Prize in History).

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