Read Empire of Liberty: A History of the Early Republic, 1789-1815 Online
Authors: Gordon S. Wood
Tags: ##genre
Weekly Register
,
708
Weems, Mason,
353
–54,
565
–66,
612
,
717
Wertmüller, Adolph,
573
Wesley, John,
581
West, Benjamin,
483
,
545
,
550
,
555
West Florida,
7
,
366
,
368
–69,
374
–75
West Indies,
323
,
540
,
622
–23,
640
,
682
,
688
West Point,
292
Western Reserve,
605
western settlement: and cultural advancement,
546
–47
and the Federalist program,
114
–23
and the Jefferson presidency,
357
–59
and land availability,
318
–19
and the Lewis and Clark expedition,
376
–82
and the Louisiana Purchase,
368
–74
and Native Americans,
112
,
114
,
120
–23,
123
–33,
396
–99
and population growth,
316
and religion,
597
and slavery,
510
,
522
wheat cultivation,
511
Wheatley, Phillis,
41
Wheeler, Ephraim,
336
Wheelock, Eleazer,
112
Wheelock, John,
465
antigovernment views,
10
,
19
“country-opposition” tradition,
172
and the French Revolution,
178
and monarchism,
162
and patronage,
299
and social changes,
93
–94
Whiskey Rebellion: and Democratic-Republican Societies,
162
,
164
,
203
and executive power,
196
–97
and the federal judiciary,
413
,
415
–16,
417
–18,
427
and the Federalist Party,
205
and military power,
134
–39,
263
and treason definitions,
439
and Washington,
198
White, James,
113
“white savages,”
395
–96
Wieland
(Brown),
335
Wilkinson, James,
113
–14,
372
,
382
–85,
685
Wilkinson, Jemima,
598
William and Mary College,
344
William of Orange,
73
Williams, Joseph,
350
Williams, Samuel,
312
Williams College,
344
Williamson, Hugh,
74
Willing, Thomas,
98
Wilson, James: and the Bill of Rights,
66
–67
and class divisions,
218
–19,
221
,
234
and the Constitution,
209
–10,
222
and the federal judiciary,
411
,
412
,
417
,
446
,
451
–52
and minimal government,
12
and monarchism,
74
and personal finances,
233
and public service,
25
–26,
27
and western settlement,
119
Wilson, Woodrow,
288
Winckelmann, Johann Joachim,
551
Winstanley, William,
571
Winthrop, John,
38
–39
Wirt, William,
590
Witherspoon, John,
48
Wolcott, Oliver,
205
,
211
,
233
,
435
Wolcott, Oliver, Jr.,
178
,
234
,
240
,
418
Wollstonecraft, Mary,
500
,
502
,
506
women’s issues: and the arts,
566
,
569
and benevolence,
13
and family structure,
495
–500
and literacy,
47
and religion,
598
and republicanism,
9
and social changes,
341
and social structure,
711
and women’s rights,
500
–507
Wood, Sally,
342
Worcester, Noah,
696
Wordsworth, William,
574
writs of mandamus,
440
–41
Wyatt conspiracy,
252
n31
Wyoming,
115
Wythe, George,
443
Yale College: and Cooper,
320
and democratization,
20
and Dwight,
39
,
244
,
305
,
355
,
501
,
602
founded,
460
,
546
and Law School,
454
and Lyon,
227
and monarchism,
75
and religion,
220
,
602
and republican reforms,
492
and social changes,
343
–44
and Stiles,
17
,
394
,
547
and Whitney,
528
Yankee
(privateer),
682
Yazoo land scandal,
128
–29,
201
,
456
yeoman farmers: and class divisions,
45
,
167
and cotton cultivation,
528
,
606
,
734
and Jefferson,
277
–78
and the Louisiana Purchase,
369
and Marshall,
433
and social structure,
320
and Washington,
206
and western settlement,
357
York (slave),
378
Young, Arthur,
324
Young Ladies Academy of Philadelphia,
505
1
. Washington Irving,
The Sketch Book
, in
Washington Irving: History, Tales and Sketches
, ed. James W. Tuttleton (New York, 1983), 770–81.
2
. Jeffrey Rubin-Dorsky,
Adrift in the Old World: The Psychological Pilgrimage of Washington Irving
(Chicago, 1988), 74–75.
3
.
Niles’ Weekly Register
, 9 (1815), 238.
4
. Irving,
The Sketch Book
, in Tuttleton, ed.,
Washington Irving
, 789.
1
. William Stephen Smith to TJ, 9 Jan. 1788,
Papers of Jefferson
, 12: 501.
2
. Thomas Lee Shippen to William Shippen, 14 Feb.–26 March 1788,
Papers of Jefferson
, 12: 502–4; Gordon S. Wood,
The Creation of the American Republic, 1776–1787
(Chapel Hill, 1969), 46–47.
3
. David Ramsay,
A Dissertation on the Manner of Acquiring the Character and Privileges of a Citizen of the United States
(Charleston, SC, 1789), 3. On the Revolution’s creation of a new volitional allegiance of citizenship, see James H. Kettner,
The Development of American Citizenship, 1608–1870
(Chapel Hill, 1978), 173–209.
4
. Philadelphia
Pennsylvania Packet
, 26 Nov. 1776.
5
. Jefferson’s “original Rough draught” of the Declaration of Independence,
Papers of Jefferson
, 1: 423.
6
. George V. Taylor, “Noncapitalist Wealth and the Origins of the French Revolution,”
AHR
, 62 (1967), 469–96; William Doyle,
Origins of the French Revolution
(Oxford, 1980), 17–18.
7
. Wood,
Creation of the American Republic
, 544.
8
. TJ to Henry Lee, 8 May 1825,
Jefferson: Writings
, 1501.
9
. Lynn Hunt,
Inventing Human Rights
(New York, 2007), 19.
10
. William Byrd, “History of the Dividing Line . . . 1728,” in Louis B. Wright, ed.,
The Prose Works of William Byrd of Westover
(Cambridge, MA, 1966), 221; Fauquier to Jeffrey Amherst, 5 Oct. 1760, in Julie Richter, “The Impact of the Death of Governor Francis Fauquier on His Slaves and Their Families,”
Colonial Williamsburg Interpreter
18, no. 3 (Fall 1997), 2.
11
. John Andrews,
A Sermon on the Importance of Mutual Kindness
(Philadelphia, 1790), 14.
12
. Mark A. Noll, “Common Sense Traditions and American Evangelical Thought,”
American Quarterly
, 37 (1985), 218; TJ to Peter Carr, 10 Aug. 1787,
Papers of Jefferson
, 12: 15.
13
. Thomas Paine,
Common Sense
(1776), in Philip S. Foner, ed.,
The Complete Writings of Thomas Paine
(New York, 1969), 1: 4.
14
. TJ to Marbois, 5 Dec. 1783,
Papers of Jefferson
, 6: 374.
15
. Geoffroy Atkinson,
The Sentimental Revolution: French Writers of 1690–1740
(Seattle, 1966); Norman S. Fiering, “Irresistible Compassion: An Aspect of Eighteenth-Century Sympathy and Humanitarianism,”
Journal of the History of Ideas
, 37 (1976), 199–212; John B. Radner, “The Art of Sympathy in Eighteenth-Century British Moral Thought,”
Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture
, 9 (Madison, WI, 1979), 189–210; Andrew Burstein,
Sentimental Democracy: The Evolution of America’s Romantic Self-Image
(New York, 1999).
16
. James Wilson, “Lectures on Law” (1790–1791),
The Works of James Wilson
, ed. Robert Green McCloskey (Cambridge, MA, 1967), 1: 213.
17
. David Hume, “of Commerce,”
Essays, Moral, Political, and Literary
, ed. Eugene F. Miller (Indianapolis, 1985), 262–63.
18
. Jan Lewis, “The Republican Wife: Virtue and Seduction in the Early Republic,”
WMQ
, 44 (1987), 689–721.
19
. Wood,
Creation of the American Republic
, 117.
20
. “Amicus Republicae,”
Address to the Public
(Exeter, NH, 1786), in Charles S. Hyneman and Donald S. Lutz, eds.,
American Political Writing During the Founding Era, 1760–1805
(Indianapolis, 1983), 1: 644.
21
. Charleston
South Carolina Gazette and General Advertiser
, 9 Aug. 1783; John Jay to GW, 27 June 1786, in Henry P. Johnston, ed.,
The Correspondence and Public Papers of John Jay
(New York, 1890–93), 3: 204–5.
22
. BR TO David Ramsay, [March or April 1788],
Letters of Rush
, 1: 454; GW to Jay, 1 Aug. 1786, 18 May 1786, in Fitzpatrick, ed.,
Writings of Washington
, 28: 503, 431–32.
23
. Charles Thomson to TJ, 6 April 1786,
Papers of Jefferson
, 9: 380; Charleston
South Carolina Gazette and Public Advertiser
, 18–21 May 1785.
24
. Editorial Note,
Papers of Jefferson
, 9: 208.
25
. JM to TJ, 24 Oct. 1787,
Papers of Jefferson
, 12: 276.
26
. Jackson Turner Main, “Government by the People: The American Revolution and Democratization of the Legislatures,”
WMQ
, 23 (1966), 391–407; Rosemarie Zagarri,
The Politics of Size: Representation in the United States, 1776–1850
(Ithaca, 1987).
27
. Alfred F. Young,
The Democratic Republicans of New York: The Origins, 1763–1797
(Chapel Hill, 1967), 40, 27.