Homegrown Terror Homegrown Terror

Homegrown Terror

Benedict Arnold and the Burning of New London

    • 11,99 €
    • 11,99 €

Descripción editorial

This lively biography of America’s most famous traitor offers a new perspective on his terrible legacy as well as life in Revolutionary Era Connecticut.

On September 6, 1781, Connecticut native Benedict Arnold and a force of 1,700 British soldiers and loyalists took Fort Griswold and burnt New London to the ground. The brutality of the invasion galvanized the new nation, and “Remember New London!” would become a rallying cry for troops under General Lafayette.

In Homegrown Terror, Eric D. Lehman chronicles the events leading up to the attack and highlights this key transformation in Arnold—the point where he went from betraying his comrades to massacring his neighbors and destroying their homes. This defining incident forever marked him as a symbol of evil, turning an antiheroic story about weakness of character and missed opportunity into one about the nature of treachery itself.

Homegrown Terror draws upon a variety of primary sources and perspectives, from the traitor himself to his former comrades like Jonathan Trumbull and Silas Deane, to the murdered Colonel Ledyard. Rethinking Benedict Arnold through the lens of this terrible episode, Lehman sheds light on the ethics of the dawning nation, and the way colonial America responded to betrayal and terror.

GÉNERO
Biografías y memorias
PUBLICADO
2012
1 de enero
IDIOMA
EN
Inglés
EXTENSIÓN
387
Páginas
EDITORIAL
Wesleyan University Press
TAMAÑO
9,9
MB

Más libros de Eric D. Lehman

Connecticut Farms and Farmers Markets Connecticut Farms and Farmers Markets
2022
A History of Connecticut Food A History of Connecticut Food
2015
Becoming Tom Thumb Becoming Tom Thumb
2012
Running Wild Novella Anthology Volume 2, Part 1 Running Wild Novella Anthology Volume 2, Part 1
2018
New England at 400 New England at 400
2019
Quotable New Englander Quotable New Englander
2018