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A Constitutional Culture

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In A Constitutional Culture, Adrian Chastain Weimer uncovers the story of how, more than a hundred years before the American Revolution, colonists pledged their lives and livelihoods to the defense...
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  • 12 April 2023
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In A Constitutional Culture, Adrian Chastain Weimer uncovers the story of how, more than a hundred years before the American Revolution, colonists pledged their lives and livelihoods to the defense of local political institutions against arbitrary rule.

With the return of Charles II to the English throne in 1660, the puritan-led colonies faced enormous pressure to conform to the crown’s priorities. Charles demanded that puritans change voting practices, baptismal policies, and laws, and he also cast an eye on local resources such as forests, a valuable source of masts for the English navy. Moreover, to enforce these demands, the king sent four royal commissioners on warships, ostensibly headed for New Netherland but easily redirected toward Boston. In the face of this threat to local rule, colonists had to decide whether they would submit to the commissioners’ authority, which they viewed as arbitrary because it was not accountable to the people, or whether they would mobilize to defy the crown.

Those resisting the crown included not just freemen (voters) but also people often seen as excluded or marginalized such as non-freemen, indentured servants, and women. Together they crafted a potent regional constitutional culture in defiance of Charles II that was characterized by a skepticism of metropolitan ambition, a defense of civil and religious liberties, and a conviction that self-government was divinely sanctioned. Weimer shows how they expressed this constitutional culture through a set of well-rehearsed practices—including fast days, debates, committee work, and petitions. Equipped with a ready vocabulary for criticizing arbitrary rule, with a providentially informed capacity for risk-taking, and with a set of intellectual frameworks for divided sovereignty, the constitutional culture that New Englanders forged would not easily succumb to an imperial authority intent on consolidating its power.

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Price: $45.00
Pages: 384
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press, Inc.
Imprint: University of Pennsylvania Press
Series: Early American Studies
Publication Date: 12 April 2023
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781512823974
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: HISTORY / United States / Colonial Period (1600-1775), POLITICAL SCIENCE / Constitutions, HISTORY / Europe / Great Britain / Stuart Era (1603-1714)
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"Exactly where, or in the words of whom, a widespread belief in colonial sovereignty first articulated itself is really not the question this book sets out to answer—its author is far too astute and sensitive a reader of the archive to fall into that trap. Instead, we have a messier portrait of this time and place, one that is richer because its author wisely chooses to let these competing, contradictory, confusing, and (quite?) arbitrary set of political, cultural, and religious arguments exist without forcing them into resolution...Thanks to Weimer’s study, we have a much more detailed, better-argued, and persuasively evidenced account of one of the lesser-studied chapters of the longer narrative of how the United States came to believe in the legitimacy of its own self-rule."
Adrian Chastain Weimer is Professor of History at Providence College and author of Martyrs’ Mirror: Persecution and Holiness in Early New England.