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3 - When “History Becomes Fable Instead of Fact”: The Deaths and Resurrections of Virginia’s Leading Revolutionaries

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 November 2014

Craig Thompson Friend
Affiliation:
North Carolina State University
Lorri Glover
Affiliation:
St Louis University, Missouri
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Summary

This chapter investigates the deaths of the South's greatest revolutionary-era leaders: George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and James Madison. While other men worked alongside these three Virginians, none played a longer or greater shaping role in the creation of the American Republic. As presidents, these three men led the federal government for twenty-four of its first twenty-eight years. They were not only revolutionary leaders; they were planter-patriarchs, too. Their deaths occurred in this distinctive national/regional/gentry context, which indelibly marked the stories recounted by witnesses to their last days. And those death narratives, in the telling and retelling, helped cement the historic reputation of these revolutionaries as southern gentlemen and American heroes. Despite nineteenth-century changes to the scripts of their deaths, it is clear that the resurrection these men desired was decidedly secular: to serve a political and historical purpose.
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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2014

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