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The MacNaughtons of Argyle

The MacNaughtons of Argyle
Author: James MacNaughton
Publisher:
Total Pages: 414
Release: 1994
Genre: Argyll and Bute (Scotland)
ISBN:

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The MacNaughtons of Argyle

The MacNaughtons of Argyle
Author: James MacNaughton (Jr.)
Publisher:
Total Pages: 394
Release: 2006
Genre:
ISBN:

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Descendants of brothers Duncan and Alexander MacNaughton of Scotland. Duncan married Margaret Fisher and they had six children from 1733 to about 1748. After his death, his wife and their children emigrated and settled in New York. Alexander married Mary McDonald (1690-1777). They had five children. He emigrated in 1738.


A Legend of Argyle; Or

A Legend of Argyle; Or
Author: David Carey
Publisher:
Total Pages: 330
Release: 1821
Genre: Argyll and Bute (Scotland)
ISBN:

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Records of Argyll

Records of Argyll
Author: Lord Archibald Campbell
Publisher:
Total Pages: 680
Release: 1885
Genre: Argyleshire
ISBN:

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Genealogy of the Robertson, Small and Related Families

Genealogy of the Robertson, Small and Related Families
Author: Archibald Robertson Small
Publisher:
Total Pages: 272
Release: 1907
Genre: Scotland
ISBN:

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William Robertson (1752-1825) was born in Scotland, and in 1762, as an orphan, went to Ireland to live with his bachelor uncle, Gilbert Robertson. They immigrated in 1772 to Washington County, New York. William married Mary Livingston in 1775. Descendants lived throughout most of the United States.


No Turning Point

No Turning Point
Author: Theodore Corbett
Publisher: University of Oklahoma Press
Total Pages: 561
Release: 2014-11-05
Genre: History
ISBN: 0806147296

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The Battle of Saratoga in 1777 ended with British general John Burgoyne’s troops surrendering to the American rebel army commanded by General Horatio Gates. Historians have long seen Burgoyne’s defeat as a turning point in the American Revolution because it convinced France to join the war on the side of the colonies, thus ensuring American victory. But that traditional view of Saratoga overlooks the complexity of the situation on the ground. Setting the battle in its social and political context, Theodore Corbett examines Saratoga and its aftermath as part of ongoing conflicts among the settlers of the Hudson and Champlain valleys of New York, Canada, and Vermont. This long, more local view reveals that the American victory actually resolved very little. In transcending traditional military history, Corbett examines the roles not only of enlisted Patriot and Redcoat soldiers but also of landowners, tenant farmers, townspeople, American Indians, Loyalists, and African Americans. He begins the story in the 1760s, when the first large influx of white settlers arrived in the New York and New England backcountry. Ethnic and religious strife marked relations among the colonists from the outset. Conflicting claims issued by New York and New Hampshire to the area that eventually became Vermont turned the skirmishes into a veritable civil war. These pre-Revolution conflicts—which determined allegiances during the Revolution—were not affected by the military outcome of the Battle of Saratoga. After Burgoyne’s defeat, the British retained control of the upper Hudson-Champlain valley and mobilized Loyalists and Native allies to continue successful raids there even after the Revolution. The civil strife among the colonists continued into the 1780s, as the American victory gave way to violent strife amounting to class warfare. Corbett ends his story with conflicts over debt in Vermont, New Hampshire, and finally Massachusetts, where the sack of Stockbridge—part of Shays’s Rebellion in 1787—was the last of the civil disruptions that had roiled the landscape for the previous twenty years. No Turning Point complicates and enriches our understanding of the difficult birth of the United States as a nation.