Sea of Possibilities

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'Deputy Husband'
'Fair Trader'
'Striver.'
'vorland'
A01=Kenneth J. Banks
Admiralty
African-American mariners
American Revolution
American trade to India
Anglican churches
Atlantic World
Author_Kenneth J. Banks
Benedict Arnold
Board of Trade
Boston
Brown Family of Providence
Burning of New London
Caribbean Free Ports
Caribbean smuggling
Category=DNB
Category=NHK
Category=WG
censorship
coffee
coffee houses
colonial bankruptcy laws
Connecticut merchant networks
Constitution
contraband
Customs House
customs inspectors
customs patrols
Danish St. Croix
debt
debt and bankruptcy
Debtor prison
Declaration of Independence
Deep Blue Sea
Depression of 1761-1766
dry goods business
early industrial revolution
Enlightenment
enslaved laborers
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
estate battles
family networks
forthcoming
French Caribbean merchants
Georgian London
grievances
Guadeloupe
horse export trade
London Refugees
Loyalist
mariners
maritime widows
navigation
New London
newspapers
Patriot imprisonment
Pax Caribbeana
Privateering
racial prejudice
Sailing routes
Samuel Loudon
school education
sea captains
self-improvement
Seven Years War
sheep farming
smuggling
smuggling voyages
South Asia
St. Domingue
Stamp Act Crisis
Statia
sugar plantation trade
Wapping docks
wartime requisitions

Product details

  • ISBN 9780813953939
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 17 Aug 2026
  • Publisher: University of Virginia Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The story of a cunning sea captain whose tempestuous life charts new dimensions of the American Revolution

This is the gripping tale of how ambitious sea captain Thomas Allen and his family navigated the gales of the American Revolution. Starting as a rogue and smuggler, Allen won and lost several fortunes before eventually establishing himself as a wealthy merchant with Loyalist leanings in Connecticut. Then, imprisoned by the Patriots during the War for Independence, Allen lost nearly everything and everyone. Rather than fleeing, he stayed and rebuilt, emerging from the crucible of revolution as an outspoken and influential champion of the new Constitution and new nation.

This telling of Allen's experience captures the everyday lives, material circumstances, and values of a middling settler family working hard and scheming harder to gain respectability and wealth in the colonial Atlantic World. In vivid detail, Kenneth Banks shows that maritime life is as crucial to our understanding of the Revolutionary era as the debates over taxation in colonial legislatures, migration and violent agitation in the backcountry, or the rise of a market-driven society. Like the Revolution itself, Allen's story is one of reinvention in a rapidly changing world.

Kenneth J. Banks is Professor of Atlantic World History at Wofford College and the author of the award-winning Chasing Empire Across the Sea: Communications and the State in the French Atlantic, 1713–1763.

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