Historians have often glorified eighteenth-century Virginia planters' philosophical debates about the meaning of American liberty. But according to Noeleen McIlvenna the true exemplars of egalitarian political values had fled Virginia&#x2019;s plantation society late in the seventeenth century to create the first successful European colony in the Albemarle in present-day North Carolina.<br/><br/>Making their way through the Great Dismal Swamp runaway servants from Virginia joined other renegades to establish a free society along the most inaccessible Atlantic coastline of North America. They created a new community on the banks of Albemarle Sound maintaining peace with neighboring Native Americans upholding the egalitarian values of the English Revolution and ignoring the laws of the mother country.<br/><br/>Tapping into previously unused documents McIlvenna explains how North Carolina&#x2019;s first planters struggled to impose a plantation society upon the settlers and how those early small farmers defending a wide franchise and religious toleration steadfastly resisted. She contends that the story of the Albemarle colony is a microcosm of the greater process by which a conglomeration of loosely settled politically autonomous communities eventually succumbed to hierarchical social structures and elite rule. Highlighting the relationship between settlers and Native Americans this study leads to a surprising new interpretation of the Tuscarora War.
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