Providence and the Invention of the United States, 1607-1876


Book Description

Nicholas Guyatt offers a completely new understanding of a central question in American history: how did Americans come to think that God favored the United States above other nations? Tracing the story of American providentialism, this book uncovers the British roots of American religious nationalism before the American Revolution and the extraordinary struggles of white Americans to reconcile their ideas of national mission with the racial diversity of the early republic. Making sense of previously diffuse debates on manifest destiny, millenarianism, and American mission, Providence and the Invention of the United States explains the origins and development of the idea that God has a special plan for America. This conviction supplied the United States with a powerful sense of national purpose, but it also prevented Americans from clearly understanding events and people that could not easily be fitted into the providential scheme.










A Century of Town Life


Book Description







Bibliotheca historica; or, a Catalogue of 5000 volumes of Books and Manuscripts relating chiefly to the history and literature of North and South America, among which is included the larger proportion of the extraordinary library of the late Henry Stevens Senior ... Edited with introduction and notes by Henry Stevens ... To be sold by auction by Messrs. Leonard & Co. ... Boston, on Tuesday the 5th, Wednesday the 6th, Thursday the 7th, and Friday the 8th day of April, 1870, etc


Book Description