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Americans on Paper: Identity and Identification in the American Revolution

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2013-10-18

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Huffman, John Michael. 2013. Americans on Paper: Identity and Identification in the American Revolution. Doctoral dissertation, Harvard University.

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The American Revolution brought with it a crisis of identification. The political divisions that fragmented American society did not distinguish adherents of the two sides in any outward way. Yet the new American governments had to identify their citizens; potential citizens themselves had to choose and prove their identities; and both sides of the war had to distinguish friend from foe. Subordinated groups who were notionally excluded from but deeply affected by the Revolutionary contest found in the same crisis new opportunity to seize control over their own identities. Those who claimed mastership over these groups struggled to maintain control amid civil war and revolution.

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American history, American Revolution, Identification, Identity, Letters of introduction, Passes, Passports

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Americans on Paper: Identity and Identification… : DASH Story 2025-06-02
I am working on a small book detailing the life of Robert Thompson, a loyalist who was executed in Newtown, Connecticut, in June 1777. He had served as a secret recruiter for British Lt. Col. Robert Rogers, who was one of the figures profiled in this dissertation. The background information and thorough documentation provided by the author of this work were of immense assistance to me in understanding the diverse factors that inspired the loyalist regiments of the American Revolution.