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Reference
>
Cambridge History
>
Early National Literature, Part II; Later National Literature, Part I
>
Writers on American History, 17831850
> Gordon; Ramsay; Drayton; Moultrie; Marshall; Wirt
Historians of the Revolution
Mrs. Warren; Weems; State Histories
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
VOLUME XVI. Early National Literature, Part II; Later National Literature, Part I.
XVII.
Writers on American History, 17831850
.
§ 2. Gordon; Ramsay; Drayton; Moultrie; Marshall; Wirt.
Gordon, who was born in England, preached at Roxbury, Massachusetts, from 1770 to 1786. He was an active Whig, and after his return to England he wrote in four volumes a history of the Revolution (1788), which was widely read by the English, and in America was honoured with a pirated edition and long extracts in the newspapers. We now know that Gordon copied freely from
The Annual Register,
of which the parts dealing with America were at that time written by Edmund Burke. It is even charged that Gordon tempered his narrative to please the feelings of his friends in England. His book is but slightly esteemed. Dr. Ramsay (17491815), of South Carolina, though educated to be a physician, was more a politician and
littérateur
than a scientist. His
History of the Revolution of South Carolina
(1785) and
History of the American Revolution
(1789) were well received by an uncritical generation. It remained for a later age to discover that the second of these books, long accepted as an original work, was largely drawn from
The Annual Register.
Drayton and Moultrie were prominent South Carolinians, one a political and the other a military defender of the Whig cause. Each wrote an excellent account of what he had seen in his own state. Marshall
1
and Wirt
2
were Virginia lawyers who thought it their duty to portray the lives of two great men of the Revolution. From the first we have the
Life of Washington
(180407) in five volumes, a heavy book without literary style and smacking of Federalist opinions. It displeased the followers of Jefferson but had a wide circulation among those who did not agree with the great Republican leader. For posterity it has value chiefly as a solid source of information. Wirts
Life of Patrick Henry
(1817) is much unlike Marshalls book. It was well writtenWirt had a polished stylebut it was a hasty and inadequate picture of a most important life. A better but less readable biography was William Tudors
Life of James Otis
(1823).
3
Note 1
. For a more extended treatment of the historians of the period, see the authors
Middle Group of American Historians
(1917).
[
back
]
Note 2
. See also Book II, Chap.
XV.
[
back
]
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
Historians of the Revolution
Mrs. Warren; Weems; State Histories
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