The Great Upheaval
Monday, October 08, 2007
The Revolution won, America's Founding Fathers did not get to spend the 1790s simply setting up their new republic. Jay Winik's The Great Upheaval describes how extraordinary events at home and across the world in Russia, France, and Egypt tested the young nation and shaped our history for centuries to come.
Event:
Jay Winik will be giving a talk, Q&A, and signing books
Tonight, Mon. 10/8
7:00 pm
Chelsea Barnes & Noble
675 6th Ave
NY NY
Purchase The Great Upheaval: America and the Birth of the Modern World, 1788-1800 at amazon.com.

Comments [2]
The Founding Fathers certainly looked back to the "Glorious Revolution" of 1688-89 as a partial model. They borrowed some of the language and ideas of the (mainly Whig) revolutionaries. And the prime idea that came out of the "G-R" was the need to keep Parliament, and especially the House of Commons, in a position to control the King, rather than the other way around. James II was the poster boy for the abuses to which Establishment of religion could lead, among other evils, and the Americans' resentment and fear of an unchecked monarchy eventually led to the Constitutional checks on the Presidency which we seem to be so casually discarding today.
any connection between english rev of the 17th century and the american rev in the 18th century
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