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Robert Middlekauff

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Robert Middlekauff


Born
in Yakima, Washington, The United States
July 05, 1929

Died
March 10, 2021

Website

Genre


A specialist in colonial and early United States history, Robert L. Middlekauff was professor emeritus of at the University of California, Berkeley.

Average rating: 3.93 · 9,331 ratings · 417 reviews · 10 distinct worksSimilar authors
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A History of Colonial America

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Glorious Cause Part 1 of 2

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Bacon's Rebellion

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Quotes by Robert Middlekauff  (?)
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“Most American ideas were a part of the great tradition of the eighteenth-century common-wealthmen, the radical Whig ideology that arose from a series of upheavals in seventeenth-century England—the Civil War, the exclusion crisis of 1679–81, and the Glorious Revolution of 1688. Broadly speaking, this Whig theory described two sorts of threats to political freedom: a general moral decay of the people which would invite the intrusion of evil and despotic rulers, and the encroachment of executive authority upon the legislature, the attempt that power always made to subdue the liberty protected by mixed government.”
Robert Middlekauff, The Glorious Cause: The American Revolution, 1763-1789

“the extent of Parliament’s authority to legislate for the colonies had not been closely examined by anyone. When it was, it became a center of controversy. The common presumption in England, wholly unexamined, was that all was clear in the colonial relation. The colonies were colonies, after all, and as such they were “dependencies,” plants set out by superiors, the “children” of the “mother country,” and “our subjects.”
Robert Middlekauff, The Glorious Cause: The American Revolution, 1763-1789

“In the end, however, the intangible played as great a part as organization or system in keeping the army going. The army’s will to survive and to fight on short rations, its willingness to suffer, to sacrifice, made the inadequate adequate and rendered the failures of others of little importance. The army overcame the worst in itself and in others. It was indomitable.”
Robert Middlekauff, The Glorious Cause: The American Revolution, 1763-1789