Carolina in Crisis

About The Book

In this engaging history Daniel J. Tortora explores how the Anglo-Cherokee War reshaped the political and cultural landscape of the colonial South. Tortora chronicles the series of clashes that erupted from 1758 to 1761 between Cherokees settlers and British troops. The conflict no insignificant sideshow to the French and Indian War eventually led to the regeneration of a British-Cherokee alliance. Tortora reveals how the war destabilized the South Carolina colony and threatened the white coastal elite arguing that the political and military success of the Cherokees led colonists to a greater fear of slave resistance and revolt and ultimately nurtured South Carolinians' rising interest in the movement for independence.<br/><br/>Drawing on newspaper accounts military and diplomatic correspondence and the speeches of Cherokee people among other sources this work reexamines the experiences of Cherokees whites and African Americans in the mid-eighteenth century. Centering his analysis on Native American history Tortora reconsiders the rise of revolutionary sentiments in the South while also detailing the Anglo-Cherokee War from the Cherokee perspective.
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