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From Treason to Runaway Slaves

Legal Culture in New Republic Trials, 1783-1808
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Law in early America was culturally special, not just a foundation for history but for the culture that bound the nation and its collective identity. From Treason to Runaway Slaves studies six high-profile trials (military order, Indian murder, land seizure, treason, libel, interracial urban crime) that incorporate themes to which the early republic attached special significance. The trials demonstrate the criticality of legal culture and legal history and the central role of the rule of law in a democracy. Tracking the new nation's bitterest and most challenging moments, we are led to ask what lies below the surface; what is American society really like; how did we come to be who we are? The book fits into the area of eighteenth-century legal culture and history, tracing across the chapters the development of early American law during the critical formative period 1783 to 1808 and focusing on important historical moments (courts martial in the American Revolution, the Whiskey Rebellion, the Philadelphia Yellow Fever epidemic, runaway slaves, among others). It attends to such areas of law as treason, libel, land law, murder, and racial justice as well as the growth of a legal profession and the changing influence of judges, juries, and lawyers.
Linda Myrsiades is professor emerita at West Chester University.
Chapter One: Trying Military Law: The Hazen-Reid Feud and the Case of Judge Advocate General Thomas Edwards, 1783 Chapter Two: "The Crooks of the Law": The Trial of Mamachtaga, the Delaware Indian, 1785 Chapter Three: "A fine peace of Land": Settlers' Rights and Land Titles in George Washington v. James Scott, et al., 1786 Chapter Four: "Whiskey Boys" and the "Pole Gentry": Treason and the Whiskey Rebellion Trials, 1795 Chapter Five: Sangrado v. The Cloven Foot: The Libel Trial of Benjamin Rush v. William Cobbett, 1799 Chapter Six: "I will a tale unfold": The Murder Trial of John Joyce and Peter Matthias, 1808
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