A captivating and lucid narrative of America's revolutionary generation,
Jefferson's America takes the reader from the earliest rumblings of
colonial dissent, through the crises of revolution and nation-making, to
the heroic drama of the War of 1812. Risjord deftly weaves together
strands of biography and social history with military and political
history to depict the rich fabric of the young republic. While most
writers on this period conclude with the end of the Revolution, the
ratification of the Constitution, or the election of Jefferson, Risjord
contends that there is a fundamental continuity in the history of the
Early Republic. The basic problems involved in creating a stable,
representative government were not resolved until the "second war of
independence," a symbolic end for the Revolutionary generation, which
produced a sense of national unity and determined the viability of the
new nation. Risjord incorporates new social and economic perspectives,
and he deals suggestively with the struggle over "who shall rule at
home." Yet he still presents the pivotal events of the War for
Independence, the framing of the Constitution, the "Revolution of 1800,"
and the War of 1812 in an interesting and understandable way. This is no
watered-down version of the national myth, but a subtle and well-told
story. The third edition reflects new research on a number of topics;
including the role of women in the resistance to British measures; the
impact of the Revolution on blacks, both slave and free; and the lot of
the common soldier during the same period.