Charlatans, embezzlers, and murderers: Revolution comes to Virginia, 1765-1775
In 1774 Virginia's last Royal Governor, Lord Dunmore, predicted that the social tensions in Virginia society would end the fomenting rebellion. For a decade the gentry had contended with a series of scandals that diminished their standing as the social, political and moral leaders of the colony...
Main Author: | White, William E. |
---|---|
Format: | Others |
Language: | English |
Published: |
W&M ScholarWorks
1998
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://scholarworks.wm.edu/etd/1539623924 https://scholarworks.wm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3491&context=etd |
Similar Items
-
The Negro in Colonial Virginia 1619-1765
by: Hook, Francis Moore
Published: (1952) -
"From a Determined Resolution to Get Liberty": Slaves and the British in Revolutionary Norfolk County, Virginia, 1775-1781
by: Palladino, Brian David
Published: (2000) -
The Wearing Apparel of the Women of Westmoreland County, Virginia, 1700-1775
by: Oberseider, Nancy Lou
Published: (1966) -
Measuring Rural Revolutionary Mobilization: The Militiamen, Soldiers, and Minutemen of Fauquier County, Virginia 1775 - 1782
by: Fackrell, Jason
Published: (2018) -
Pennsylvania's Loyalists and Disaffected in the Age of Revolution: Defining the Terrain of Reintegration, 1765-1800
by: Silva, Rene J
Published: (2018)