Quaker, Whaler, Traitor, Spy!

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A01=Sarah Crabtree
A12=Melissa Philley
American Revolution
Author_Melissa Philley
Author_Sarah Crabtree
Boston Tea Party
Boston Tea Party merchant networks
Capitalism
Category=NHK
Comics
conscience capitalism and empire
Dunkirk
Eighteenth-century
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_new_release
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
France
France Britain and revolutionary America
French Revolution
graphic history
graphic history of the American Revolution
Great Britain
historical methodology
Historiography
loyalty treason and political suspicion
maritime trade in the Atlantic world
Mercantilism
Nantucket
Nantucket whaling history
Nationalism
New Bedford
pacifism and treason in early America
pacifism in wartime politics
Quaker
Quaker merchant in the Age of Revolution
Quakers and the American Revolution
Religion
Revolutionary Atlantic world
semiquincentennial
Society of Friends
United States
War of Independence
Whaling
whaling commerce and neutrality
William Rotch biography

Product details

  • ISBN 9780271101521
  • Weight: 249g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Mar 2026
  • Publisher: Pennsylvania State University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Accused of treason four times by three governments, William Rotch led a harrowing life. A Quaker merchant in the Age of Revolution, he refused to fight for either independence or empire. To governments and neighbors, his pacifism looked like treachery. As he fled from Nantucket to France to Britain and back again, Rotch suffered looting, inquisitions, and the threat of imprisonment and execution for his principled refusal to fight.

Yet Rotch was also a beneficiary of these turbulent years. Drawing on fresh archival research, Sarah Crabtree reveals how Rotch turned revolutionary upheaval to his advantage. He used his whaling ships to dodge national borders, claim multiple residences, and play rival governments against one another, building a vast fortune even as he faced trials for his supposed disloyalties. Beginning with the Boston Tea Party—when his family’s ships carried the infamous cargo—Rotch’s story illuminates the contested ideals of freedom, capitalism, and conscience in the Revolutionary Atlantic world.

Quaker, Whaler, Traitor, Spy! uses the comic form to tell this remarkable story from all angles, showing how different sources paint Rotch’s character in different lights. Through striking visuals and careful storytelling, this graphic history invites readers to question how history gets made and how we ought to reconcile seemingly contradictory accounts. Both engaging narrative and scholarly case study, this book is not only ideal for methods courses and classes in US history but also an accessible and compelling read for general audiences.

Sarah Crabtree is Professor of History at San Francisco State University. She is the author of Holy Nation: The Transatlantic Quaker Ministry in an Age of Revolution.

Melissa Philley is a graduate of the MFA in Comics program at California College of the Arts. She uses traditional and digital tools to create longform comics in a variety of styles and genres.

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