Prisoners of Congress

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A01=Norman E. Donoghue II
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American
American Crisis by Thomas Paine
Author_Norman E. Donoghue II
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Banishing Law
Category1=Non-Fiction
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congressional investigation concluded with preordained conclusions
COP=United States
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due process
Elizabeth Sandwith Drinker
Epistle to the Quakers" in Common Sense
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executive overreach in founding era
fake news
first American political prisoners
First suspension of habeas corpus in US
Friends meeting houses
Gilpin
Henry Drinker (1734-1809)
Israel Pemberton
James Pemberton
John Adams civil liberties hypocrisy: Boston Massacre
John Pemberton
Language_English
loyalty oaths or the Test Act (1777) in Pennsylvania
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pacifism
Philadelphia Yearly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends
political chicanery
preventive detention
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Quaker exile
Quakers arrested without criminal charges
rights guaranteed by Magna Carta
Sarah Logan Fisher
softlaunch
Spanktown Papers
suppression of dissent
suspension of habeas corpus
the American Revolution
the Philadelphia Campaign (1777-78)
the Virginia exiles
Thomas Paine
unconstitutional
unlawful arrest without warrant

Product details

  • ISBN 9780271095073
  • Weight: 544g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 13 Jun 2023
  • Publisher: Pennsylvania State University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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Prisoners of Congress uncovers a forgotten Revolutionary War story with startling resonance today. In 1777, the Continental Congress condemned Quakers as an internal threat to the new republic and recommended the preventive detention of them, revealing how quickly fear and wartime urgency could turn neighbors into suspects.

This compelling narrative follows four Philadelphia-area families as they are swept into political crisis. Drawing on letters, diaries, and official records, Norman E. Donoghue II tells the story of seventeen Quakers, who, based on suspicion alone, were forcibly removed from Pennsylvania and imprisoned in Virginia. Stripped of habeas corpus protections and denied the chance to defend themselves, the exiles became what Donoghue identifies as the nation’s first political prisoners. Through personal stories of loyalty, conscience, and survival, the book brings readers inside a dramatic episode that is a cautionary tale for any democracy under pressure.

Vividly written and deeply researched, Prisoners of Congress speaks to readers interested in the American Revolution while offering fresh insight for scholars of individual liberties and US political and constitutional history. Revealing the nation’s first political prisoners, it challenges founding myths and invites reconsideration of how liberty and intolerance exist side-by-side.

Norman E. Donoghue II is a retired attorney and an independent scholar and historian based in Philadelphia. His website is prisonersofcongress.com.

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