Editor Rhodehamel is the Norris Foundation Curator of American History at the Huntington Library in San Marino, California. He has compiled a comprehensive collection of primary source documents that cover numerous facets of the Revolution. From the British side, readers can learn from General Gage how frustrating he found patriot hit-and-run tactics. Scholars interested in the plight of Native Americans during the Revolution will find the "Appeal of the Continental Congress to the Iroquois" very instructive. In a fascinating exercise in self-serving arrogance, Benedict Arnold justifies his betrayal to the citizens of New York. This work will serve as a marvelous research tool for specialists, but general readers with an interest in American history will also find fascinating gems in this latest volume from the Library of America. Jay Freeman
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“[P]owerful, startling and a subtle but profound challenge to much that we think we know about the founders and their era.” —Los Angeles Times
About the Author
John Rhodehamel, volume editor, is Norris Foundation Curator of Early American Historical Manuscripts at the Huntington Library in San Marino, California. He is the author of The Great Experiment: George Washington and the American Republic and editor of George Washington: Writings for The Library of America.