Accommodating Revolutions: Virginia's Northern Neck
in an Era of Transformation, 1760-1810 |
| |
| Albert H. Tillson, Jr. |
| 416 pages, 6 1/8 x 9 1/4 |
| 1 map, 2 tables |
| Cloth ISBN 978-0-8139-2845-6 $45.00 |
| January 2010 |
 |
Accommodating Revolutions addresses a controversy of long
standing among historians of eighteenth-century America and Virginiathe
extent to which internal conflict and/or consensus characterized
the society of the Revolutionary era. In particular, it emphasizes
the complex and often self-defeating actions and decisions of
dissidents and other non-elite groups. By focusing on a small
but significant region, Tillson elucidates the multiple and interrelated
sources of conflict that beset Revolutionary Virginia, but also
explains why in the end so little changed.
In the Northern Neckthe six-county portion of Virginia's
Tidewater lying between the Potomac and Rappahannock riversTillson
scrutinizes a wealthy and powerful, but troubled, planter elite,
which included such prominent men as George Washington, Richard
Henry Lee, Landon Carter, and Robert Carter. Throughout the late
eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, the Northern Neck gentry
confronted not only contradictions in cultural ideals and behavioral
patterns within their own lives, but also the chronic hostility
of their poorer white neighbors, arising from a diverse array
of local economic and political issues. These insecurities were
further intensified by changes in the system of African American
slavery and by the growing role of Scottish merchants and their
Virginia agents in the marketing of Chesapeake tobacco. For a
time, the upheavals surrounding the War for American Independence
and the roughly contemporaneous rise of vibrant, biracial evangelical
religious movements threatened to increase popular discontent
to the point of overwhelming the gentry's political authority
and cultural hegemony. But in the end, the existing order survived
essentially intact. In part, this was because the region's leaders
found ways to limit and accommodate threatening developments and
patterns of change, largely through the use of traditional social
and political appeals that had served them well for decades. Yet
in part it was also because ordinary Northern Neckersincluding
many leaders in the movements of wartime and religious dissidenceconsciously
or unconsciously accommodated themselves to both the patterns
of economic change transforming their world and to the traditional
ideals of the elite, and thus were unable to articulate or accept
an alternative vision for the future of the region.
Albert H. Tillson Jr. is a Professor in the Department
of History at the University of Tampa and the author of Gentry
and Common Folk: Political Culture on a Virginia Frontier, 1740-1789.