fbpx
Wikipedia

Edmund Morgan (historian)

Edmund Sears Morgan (January 17, 1916 – July 8, 2013) was an American historian and an authority on early American history. He was the Sterling Professor of History at Yale University, where he taught from 1955 to 1986.[1] He specialized in American colonial history, with some attention to English history. Thomas S. Kidd says he was noted for his incisive writing style, "simply one of the best academic prose stylists America has ever produced."[2] He covered many topics, including Puritanism, political ideas, the American Revolution, slavery, historiography, family life, and numerous notables such as Benjamin Franklin.

Edmund Sears Morgan
Born(1916-01-17)January 17, 1916
DiedJuly 8, 2013(2013-07-08) (aged 97)
NationalityAmerican
Alma materHarvard University (BA, PhD)
London School of Economics
Scientific career
InstitutionsUniversity of Chicago
Brown University
Yale University
Doctoral advisorPerry Miller
Doctoral students

Early life and education edit

Morgan was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota, the second child of Edmund Morris Morgan and Elsie Smith Morgan.[3] His mother was from a Yankee family that practiced Christian Science, though she distanced herself from that faith. His father, descended from Welsh coal miners, taught law at the University of Minnesota.[4] His sister was Roberta Mary Morgan (later Wohlstetter), also a historian and, like Edmund, a winner of the Bancroft Prize.

In 1925, the family moved from Washington, D.C., to Arlington, Massachusetts, when their father was appointed a professor at Harvard Law School.[5]

Morgan attended Belmont Hill School in Belmont, Massachusetts, and then enrolled at Harvard College, where he initially intended to study English history and literature. But after taking a course in American literature with F. O. Matthiessen, he switched to the new major of American civilization (history and literature), with Perry Miller as his tutor. He received his bachelor's degree from Harvard in 1937. Then, at the urging of the jurist and family friend Felix Frankfurter, Morgan began attending lectures at the London School of Economics.[5]

In 1942, Morgan earned his Ph.D. in the History of American Civilization from Harvard University with Miller as his adviser.

Military service edit

Although a pacifist, Morgan became convinced after the fall of France in June 1940 that only military force could stop Hitler, and he withdrew his application for conscientious objector status. During World War II, he trained as a machinist at the MIT Radiation Laboratory, where he turned out parts for radar installations.

Personal life and death edit

In 1939, he married Helen Theresa Mayer, who died in 1982.

Morgan died in New Haven, Connecticut on July 8, 2013, at the age of 97. His cause of death was pneumonia.[6] He was survived by two daughters—Penelope Aubin and Pamela Packard—from his first marriage; his second wife, Marie (née Carpenter) Caskey Morgan, a historian; six grandchildren; and seven great-grandchildren.[5][7]

Career edit

In 1946–55, Morgan taught history at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island before becoming a professor at Yale University, where he directed some 60 PhD dissertations in colonial history before retiring in 1986.

As an undergraduate at Harvard, Morgan was profoundly influenced by historian Perry Miller, who became a lifelong friend. Although both were atheists, they had a deep understanding and respect for Puritan religion.[8] From Miller, Morgan learned to appreciate:

The intellectual rigor and elegance of a system of ideas that made sense of human life in a way no longer palatable to most of us. Certainly not palatable to me... He left me with a habit of taking what people have said at face value unless I find compelling reasons to discount it... What Americans said from the beginning about taxation and just government deserved to be taken as seriously as the Puritans' ideas about God and man.[9]

Morgan's many books and articles covered a range of topics in the history of the colonial and Revolutionary periods, using intellectual, social history, biographical, and political history approaches. Two of his early books, The Birth of the Republic (1956) and The Puritan Dilemma (1958), have for decades been required reading in many undergraduate history courses. His works include American Slavery, American Freedom (1975), which won the Society of American Historians' Francis Parkman Prize, the Southern Historical Association's Charles S. Sydnor Prize and the American Historical Association's Albert J. Beveridge Award, and Inventing the People: The Rise of Popular Sovereignty in England and America (1988), which won Columbia University's Bancroft Prize in American History in 1989. Morgan has written a biography of Benjamin Franklin of which he made extensive use of The Papers of Benjamin Franklin and has written about at length.[10] He has also written biographies on Ezra Stiles and Roger Williams.

Puritans edit

Morgan's trio The Puritan Family: Religion and Domestic Relations in 17th-Century New England (1944), The Puritan Dilemma (1958), and Visible Saints: The History of a Puritan Idea (1963) restored the intellectual respectability of the Puritans, and exposed their appetite for healthy sex, causing a renaissance in Puritan studies, partly because both Morgan and his mentor Miller were Ivy League atheist professors, which added to their credibility.[2] Visible Saints, dedicated to Miller, was a reinterpretation of the Puritan ideal of the "Church of the Elect." Morgan argued that the criterion for church membership was not fixed in England. Soon after their arrival, the Puritans changed membership to a gathered church composed exclusively of tested Saints.[11]

Morgan's 1958 book The Puritan Dilemma raised his notability, and the book became the most assigned textbook in U.S. history survey courses, documenting the change in understanding among Puritans of what it means to be a member of a church. Morgan described the Puritan as "doing right in a world that does wrong...Caught between the ideals of God's Law and the practical needs of the people, John Winthrop walked a line few could tread."[12]

American Revolution edit

In The Stamp Act Crisis (1953) and The Birth of the Republic (1956) Morgan rejected the Progressive interpretation of the American Revolution and its assumption that the rhetoric of the Patriots was mere claptrap. Instead Morgan returned to the interpretation first set out by George Bancroft a century before that the patriots were deeply motivated by a commitment to liberty. Historian Mark Egnal argues that:

The leading neo-Whig historians, Edmund Morgan and Bernard Bailyn, underscore this dedication to whiggish principles, although with variant readings. For Morgan, the development of the patriots' beliefs was a rational, clearly defined process.[13]

Slavery edit

In his 1975 book American Slavery, American Freedom, Morgan explored "the American paradox, the marriage of slavery and freedom":[14]

Human relations among us still suffer from the former enslavement of a large portion of our predecessors. The freedom of the free, the growth of freedom experienced in the American Revolution depended more than we like to admit on the enslavement of more than 20 percent of us at that time. How republican freedom came to be supported, at least in large part, by its opposite, slavery, is the subject of this book.[15]

Morgan claimed that large Virginia plantation owners exerted an outsized influence on poorer white Virginians and their attitude toward the racial divide (color line) which made it possible for Virginian white men as a group to become more politically equal: ("Aristocrats could more safely preach equality in a slave society than in a free one").[16]

In a controversial passage, Morgan suggests Virginia's poor whites felt no racial superiority to poor blacks. He does this by providing evidence that, in 17th-century Virginia, poor white indentured servants and black slaves frequently cooperated with each other and worked together. Morgan cites the 1676 Bacon's Rebellion as evidence of a surprising racial egalitarianism among the poor, since Bacon incorporated runaway black slaves into his army.

Despite the assertions of such writers as Michelle Alexander,[17] however, Morgan does not state that Bacon's Rebellion was the reason that rich landowners stopped purchasing white indentured servants and started increasing their purchase of black slaves; rather, regional changes in labor economics was the reason black slaves began to replace white servants: during the early 1600s, white servants cost less per unit labor than black slaves did; but by the latter 1600s, the situation reversed itself, and black slaves became the more economical investment.[18] And, as Morgan states, "The planters who bought slaves instead of servants did not do so with any apparent consciousness of the social stability to be gained thereby. Indeed, insofar as Virginians expressed themselves on the subject of slavery, they feared that it would magnify the danger of insurrection in the colony."[19] As events evolved, however, the rising number of black slaves and the virtual end to the importation of indentured servants did stabilize Virginia society. And as time went on, according to Morgan, Virginia politicians learned to further pacify poor whites by fostering a sense of white superiority.[20] "Racism made it possible for white Virginians to develop a devotion to the equality that English republicans had declared to be the soul of liberty.[21]" That is, according to Morgan, white men in Virginia were able to become much more politically equal and cohesive than would have been possible without a population of low-status black slaves.[22]

Anthony S. Parent commented: "American historians of our generation admire Edmund Morgan's American Slavery, American Freedom more than any other monograph. Morgan resuscitated American history by placing black slavery and white freedom as its central paradox."[23]

In 2002 Morgan published a surprise New York Times Bestseller, Benjamin Franklin, which dispels the myth of "a comfortable old gentleman staring out at the world over his half-glasses with benevolent comprehension of everything in it", revealing his true mental makeup.

With a wisdom about himself that comes only to the great of heart, Franklin knew how to value himself and what he did without mistaking himself for something more than one man among many. His special brand of self-respect required him to honor his fellow men and women no less than himself.

Legacy and impact edit

After examining his writings, University of North Florida historian wrote David T. Courtwright wrote that:

They are based on exhaustive research in primary sources; emphasize human agency as against historicist forces; and are written in precise and graceful prose. This combination of rigor, empathy, and lucidity is intended for, and has succeeded in capturing, a broad audience. Morgan is read by secondary school students, undergraduates, and graduate students, as well as by his specialist peers – some sixty of whom were trained in his seminars.[24]

Massachusetts Institute of Technology American history professor Pauline Maier wrote:

As a historian of colonial and revolutionary America, he was one of the giants of his generation, and a writer who could well have commanded a larger nonacademic audience than I suspect he received. He characteristically took on big issues and had a knack for conveying complex, sophisticated truths in a way that made them seem, if not simple, at least easily understandable.[5]

Brooklyn College history professor Benjamin L. Carp describes Morgan as "one of the great historians of early America, with a formidable influence on academic and popular audiences."[25] Jill Lepore called Morgan "one of the most influential American historians of the 20th century."[26] According to Joseph Ellis, Morgan was "revered" by other members of the profession.[27]

Historian and author William Hogeland affirms Morgan's success in enshrining a "consensus approach" to U.S. history, where colonists' ideas, rather than their possible economic interests, were worthy of inspection by 20th century historians.[28] "He was out to define something essential in the American character and thereby create a new master narrative, and to achieve that end, he concocted a false portrayal of the colonists’ petitions," Hogeland wrote.

The essayist Ta-Nehisi Coates credits Morgan with greatly influencing his own views about race in American history.[29]

Awards and honors edit

Morgan was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 1964[30] and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1966.[31] In 1971 Morgan was awarded the Yale chapter of Phi Beta Kappa's William Clyde DeVane Medal for outstanding teaching and scholarship, considered one of the most prestigious teaching prizes for Yale faculty. In 1971–1972 Morgan served as president of the Organization of American Historians.[32] In 1972, he became the first recipient of the Douglass Adair Memorial Award for scholarship in early American history, and in 1986 he received the Distinguished Scholar Award of the American Historical Association. He has also won numerous fellowships and garnered a number of honorary degrees and named lectureships. In 1965 he became a Sterling Professor, one of Yale's highest distinctions. Morgan was awarded the 2000 National Humanities Medal by U.S. President Bill Clinton at a ceremony for "extraordinary contributions to American cultural life and thought." In 2006 he received a special Pulitzer Prize "for a creative and deeply influential body of work as an American historian that spans the last half century."[33] In 2008 the American Academy of Arts and Letters honored him with a gold medal for lifetime achievement.

Books edit

  • The Puritan Family: Religion and Domestic Relations in 17th-Century New England (1944) read online
  • Virginians at Home: Family Life in the Eighteenth Century (1952)
  • The Stamp Act Crisis: Prologue to Revolution (1953), with Helen M. Morgan
  • The Birth of the Republic, 1763–89 (1956; 4th ed. 2012) read online
  • The Puritan Dilemma: The Story of John Winthrop (1958) read online
  • The American Revolution: A Review of Changing Interpretations (1958)
  • The Mirror of the Indian (1958)
  • Editor, Prologue to the Revolution: Sources and Documents on the Stamp Act Crisis, 1764–1766 (1959)
  • The Gentle Puritan: A Life of Ezra Stiles, 1727–1795 (1962) read online
  • The National Experience: A History of the United States (1963) coauthor of textbook; several editions
  • Visible Saints: The History of a Puritan Idea (1963)
  • Editor, The Founding of Massachusetts: Historians and the Sources (1964)
  • The American Revolution: Two Centuries of Interpretation (1965)
  • Puritan Political Ideas, 1558–1794 (1965) read online
  • The Diary of Michael Wigglesworth, 1653–1657: The Conscience of a Puritan (1965)
  • The Puritan Family ([1944] 1966)
  • Roger Williams: The Church and the State (1967) read online
  • So What About History? (1969)
  • American Slavery, American Freedom: The Ordeal of Colonial Virginia (1975)
  • The Meaning of Independence: John Adams, George Washington, and Thomas Jefferson (1976, reprint with new foreword, 2004)
  • The Genius of George Washington (1980)
  • Inventing the People: The Rise of Popular Sovereignty in England and America (1988)
  • Benjamin Franklin (Yale University Press, 2002) read online
  • The Genuine Article: A Historian Looks at Early America (2004), selected review essays from New York Review of Books read online
  • American Heroes: Profiles of Men and Women Who Shaped Early America (2009), biographical essays read online

Selected articles edit

  • Morgan, Edmund S. (1937). "The Case against Anne Hutchinson". The New England Quarterly. 10 (4): 635–649. doi:10.2307/359929. JSTOR 359929.
  • Morgan, Edmund S. (1942). "The Puritans and Sex". The New England Quarterly. 15 (4): 591–607. doi:10.2307/361501. JSTOR 361501.
  • Morgan, Edmund S. (1948). "Colonial Ideas of Parliamentary Power 1764-1766". The William and Mary Quarterly. 5 (3): 311–341. doi:10.2307/1923462. JSTOR 1923462.
  • Morgan, Edmund S. (1948). "Thomas Hutchinson and the Stamp Act". The New England Quarterly. 21 (4): 459–492. doi:10.2307/361566. JSTOR 361566.
  • Morgan, Edmund S. (1950). "The Postponement of the Stamp Act". The William and Mary Quarterly. 7 (3): 353–392. doi:10.2307/1917228. JSTOR 1917228.
  • Morgan, Edmund S. (1954). "Ezra Stiles: The Education of a Yale Man, 1742-1746". Huntington Library Quarterly. 17 (3): 251–268. doi:10.2307/3816428. JSTOR 3816428.
  • Morgan, Edmund S. (1957). "The American Revolution: Revisions in Need of Revising". The William and Mary Quarterly. 14 (1): 3–15. doi:10.2307/1917368. JSTOR 1917368.
  • Morgan, Edmund S. (1957). "Ezra Stiles and Timothy Dwight". Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society. 72: 101–117. JSTOR 25080517.
  • Morgan, Edmund S. (1967). "The Puritan Ethic and the American Revolution". The William and Mary Quarterly. 24 (1): 4–43. doi:10.2307/1920560. JSTOR 1920560.
  • Morgan, Edmund S. (1971). "The First American Boom: Virginia 1618 to 1630". The William and Mary Quarterly. 28 (2): 170–198. doi:10.2307/1917308. JSTOR 1917308.
  • Morgan, Edmund S. (1971). "The Labor Problem at Jamestown, 1607-18". The American Historical Review. 76 (3): 595–611. doi:10.2307/1851619. JSTOR 1851619.
  • Morgan, Edmund S. (1972). "Slavery and Freedom: The American Paradox". The Journal of American History. 59 (1): 5–29. doi:10.2307/1888384. JSTOR 1888384.
  • Morgan, Edmund S. (1983). "The World and William Penn". Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society. 127 (5): 291–315. JSTOR 986499.
  • Morgan, Edmund S. (1986). "Safety in Numbers: Madison, Hume, and the Tenth 'Federalist'". Huntington Library Quarterly. 49 (2): 95–112. doi:10.2307/3817178. JSTOR 3817178.
  • Morgan, Edmund S. (1987). "John Winthrop's 'Modell of Christian Charity' in a Wider Context". Huntington Library Quarterly. 50 (2): 145–151. doi:10.2307/3817255. JSTOR 3817255.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Feeney, Mark (2013-07-10). . The Boston Globe. Archived from the original on 2018-02-25.
  2. ^ a b Thomas S. Kidd (2013-07-16). "The Historical Genius of Edmund Morgan". Anxious Bench. Retrieved 2018-02-25.
  3. ^ Associated Press (2013-07-10). . Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on 2018-02-25.
  4. ^ Murrin, John M. (2000). Edmund S. Morgan. University of Missouri Press/Google EBook. ISBN 9780826213167. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  5. ^ a b c d Grimes, William (2013-07-09). . The New York Times. Archived from the original on 2018-02-25.
  6. ^ Schudel, Matt (2013-07-10). . The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Archived from the original on 2018-02-25.
  7. ^ Hattem, Michael D. (2013-08-05). . The Junto. Archived from the original on 2018-02-25.
  8. ^ Courtland, pp 349–50
  9. ^ Morgan, Edmund S. (2004). The Genuine Article: A Historian Looks at Early America. W. W. Norton & Company. pp. ix–x. ISBN 0393059200.
  10. ^ "Introduction to the Papers of Benjamin Franklin". The American Philosophical Society and Yale University. 2005. Retrieved September 22, 2022.
  11. ^ Van Beek, Elizabeth T. (1999), "Morgan, Edmund S.", in Kelly Boyd (ed.), Encyclopedia of Historians and Historical Writing, vol. 2, p. 837, ISBN 1-884964-33-8
  12. ^ Butler, Jon (December 2013). . Perspectives on History. American Historical Association. Archived from the original on 2018-02-25.
  13. ^ Marc Egnal (2010). A Mighty Empire: The Origins of the American Revolution. Cornell University Press. pp. 3–5. ISBN 978-0801476587.
  14. ^ Morgan, Edmund S. (1975). American Slavery, American Freedom. p. 5.
  15. ^ Morgan. American Slavery, American Freedom. pp. Preface.
  16. ^ Morgan. American Slavery, American Freedom (2nd ed.). p. 380.
  17. ^ Alexander, Michelle (2012). The New Jim Crow. The New Press. pp. 29–30. ISBN 978-1595586438."The systematic enslavement of Africans… emerged with all deliberate speed – quickened by events such as Bacon's Rebellion…. In an effort to protect their superior status and economic position, the planters shifted their strategy for maintaining dominance. They abandoned their heavy reliance on indentured servants in favor of the importation of more black slaves."
  18. ^ Morgan. American Slavery, American Freedom. pp. 297–99."Why… did Virginians not furnish themselves with slaves as soon as they began to grow tobacco? Why did they wait so long [to import large numbers of black slaves]? The answer lies in the fact that slave labor… was actually not as advantageous as indentured labor during the first half of the century… The point at which it became more advantageous for Virginians to buy slaves was probably reached by 1660."
  19. ^ Morgan. American Slavery, American Freedom. p. 308.
  20. ^ Morgan. American Slavery, American Freedom. p. 328. "If freemen with disappointed hopes should make common cause with slaves of desperate hope, the results might be worse than anything Bacon had done. The answer to the problem, obvious if unspoken and only gradually recognized, was racism."
  21. ^ Morgan. American Slavery, American Freedom. p. 386.
  22. ^ Morgan, American Slavery, American Freedom p. 386
  23. ^ Anthony S. Parent (2003). Foul Means: The Formation of a Slave Society in Virginia, 1660–1740. University of North Carolina Press. p. 1. ISBN 9780807854860.
  24. ^ David T. Courtwright, "Fifty Years of American History: An Interview with Edmund S. Morgan", William and Mary Quarterly (1987): p. 336.
  25. ^ Carp, Benjamin L. (March 2016). . Reviews in American History. 44 (1): 1–18. doi:10.1353/rah.2016.0014. S2CID 147313665. Archived from the original on 2018-02-25.
  26. ^ Jill Lepore (2013-07-10). . The Daily Beast. Archived from the original on 2018-02-25.
  27. ^ Joseph Ellis (2013-07-10). . Newsweek. Archived from the original on 2018-02-25.
  28. ^ Hogeland, William (25 January 2021). "Against the Consensus Approach to History". The New Republic. ISSN 0028-6583. Retrieved 27 January 2021.
  29. ^ Ta-Nehisi Coates (2017-09-29). "We should have seen Trump coming". The Guardian.
  30. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 2022-11-03.
  31. ^ "Edmund Sears Morgan". American Academy of Arts & Sciences. Retrieved 2022-11-03.
  32. ^ . Organization of American Historians. Archived from the original on 2012-06-10.
  33. ^ "2006 Special Award". Pulitzer Prize.

Further reading edit

  • Carp, Benjamin L. "Edmund S. Morgan and the Urgency of Good Leadership." Reviews in American History 44.1 (2016): 1–18.
  • Courtwright, David T. (1987). "Fifty Years of American History: An Interview with Edmund S. Morgan". The William and Mary Quarterly. 44 (2): 336–369. doi:10.2307/1939669. JSTOR 1939669.
  • Liddle, William D. "Edmund S. Morgan (1916– )" in Clyde N. Wilson, ed., Twentieth-Century American Historians (Dictionary of Literary Biography, vol. XVII) (Detroit, 1983), pp 285–95.
  • Middlekauff, Robert. “In Memoriam: Edmund S. Morgan 1916-2013.” New England Quarterly 96#4 (2013), pp. 685–687. online.
  • Murrin, John M. "Edmund S. Morgan," in Robert Allen Rutland, ed. Clio's Favorites: Leading Historians of the United States, 1945–2000 U of Missouri Press. (2000) pp 126–137
  • Nawotka, Edward (December 2002). "Edmund Morgan: The Historian's Historian". Publishers Weekly. 249 (49): 57.
  • Grimes, William (9 July 2013). "Edmund S. Morgan, Historian Who Shed Light on Puritans, Dies at 97". The New York Times.
  • Washington Post obituary
  • Boston Globe obituary
  • American Historical Association obituary
  • Obituary by Thomas Kidd
  • Obituary by Jill Lepore

External links edit

edmund, morgan, historian, edmund, sears, morgan, january, 1916, july, 2013, american, historian, authority, early, american, history, sterling, professor, history, yale, university, where, taught, from, 1955, 1986, specialized, american, colonial, history, wi. Edmund Sears Morgan January 17 1916 July 8 2013 was an American historian and an authority on early American history He was the Sterling Professor of History at Yale University where he taught from 1955 to 1986 1 He specialized in American colonial history with some attention to English history Thomas S Kidd says he was noted for his incisive writing style simply one of the best academic prose stylists America has ever produced 2 He covered many topics including Puritanism political ideas the American Revolution slavery historiography family life and numerous notables such as Benjamin Franklin Edmund Sears MorganBorn 1916 01 17 January 17 1916Minneapolis Minnesota U S DiedJuly 8 2013 2013 07 08 aged 97 New Haven Connecticut U S NationalityAmericanAlma materHarvard University BA PhD London School of EconomicsScientific careerInstitutionsUniversity of ChicagoBrown UniversityYale UniversityDoctoral advisorPerry MillerDoctoral studentsJoseph Ellis Christine Leigh Heyrman Bruce H Mann Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Military service 3 Personal life and death 4 Career 4 1 Puritans 4 2 American Revolution 4 3 Slavery 5 Legacy and impact 6 Awards and honors 7 Books 8 Selected articles 9 Notes 10 Further reading 11 External linksEarly life and education editMorgan was born in Minneapolis Minnesota the second child of Edmund Morris Morgan and Elsie Smith Morgan 3 His mother was from a Yankee family that practiced Christian Science though she distanced herself from that faith His father descended from Welsh coal miners taught law at the University of Minnesota 4 His sister was Roberta Mary Morgan later Wohlstetter also a historian and like Edmund a winner of the Bancroft Prize In 1925 the family moved from Washington D C to Arlington Massachusetts when their father was appointed a professor at Harvard Law School 5 Morgan attended Belmont Hill School in Belmont Massachusetts and then enrolled at Harvard College where he initially intended to study English history and literature But after taking a course in American literature with F O Matthiessen he switched to the new major of American civilization history and literature with Perry Miller as his tutor He received his bachelor s degree from Harvard in 1937 Then at the urging of the jurist and family friend Felix Frankfurter Morgan began attending lectures at the London School of Economics 5 In 1942 Morgan earned his Ph D in the History of American Civilization from Harvard University with Miller as his adviser Military service editAlthough a pacifist Morgan became convinced after the fall of France in June 1940 that only military force could stop Hitler and he withdrew his application for conscientious objector status During World War II he trained as a machinist at the MIT Radiation Laboratory where he turned out parts for radar installations Personal life and death editIn 1939 he married Helen Theresa Mayer who died in 1982 Morgan died in New Haven Connecticut on July 8 2013 at the age of 97 His cause of death was pneumonia 6 He was survived by two daughters Penelope Aubin and Pamela Packard from his first marriage his second wife Marie nee Carpenter Caskey Morgan a historian six grandchildren and seven great grandchildren 5 7 Career editIn 1946 55 Morgan taught history at Brown University in Providence Rhode Island before becoming a professor at Yale University where he directed some 60 PhD dissertations in colonial history before retiring in 1986 As an undergraduate at Harvard Morgan was profoundly influenced by historian Perry Miller who became a lifelong friend Although both were atheists they had a deep understanding and respect for Puritan religion 8 From Miller Morgan learned to appreciate The intellectual rigor and elegance of a system of ideas that made sense of human life in a way no longer palatable to most of us Certainly not palatable to me He left me with a habit of taking what people have said at face value unless I find compelling reasons to discount it What Americans said from the beginning about taxation and just government deserved to be taken as seriously as the Puritans ideas about God and man 9 Morgan s many books and articles covered a range of topics in the history of the colonial and Revolutionary periods using intellectual social history biographical and political history approaches Two of his early books The Birth of the Republic 1956 and The Puritan Dilemma 1958 have for decades been required reading in many undergraduate history courses His works include American Slavery American Freedom 1975 which won the Society of American Historians Francis Parkman Prize the Southern Historical Association s Charles S Sydnor Prize and the American Historical Association s Albert J Beveridge Award and Inventing the People The Rise of Popular Sovereignty in England and America 1988 which won Columbia University s Bancroft Prize in American History in 1989 Morgan has written a biography of Benjamin Franklin of which he made extensive use of The Papers of Benjamin Franklin and has written about at length 10 He has also written biographies on Ezra Stiles and Roger Williams Puritans edit Morgan s trio The Puritan Family Religion and Domestic Relations in 17th Century New England 1944 The Puritan Dilemma 1958 and Visible Saints The History of a Puritan Idea 1963 restored the intellectual respectability of the Puritans and exposed their appetite for healthy sex causing a renaissance in Puritan studies partly because both Morgan and his mentor Miller were Ivy League atheist professors which added to their credibility 2 Visible Saints dedicated to Miller was a reinterpretation of the Puritan ideal of the Church of the Elect Morgan argued that the criterion for church membership was not fixed in England Soon after their arrival the Puritans changed membership to a gathered church composed exclusively of tested Saints 11 Morgan s 1958 book The Puritan Dilemma raised his notability and the book became the most assigned textbook in U S history survey courses documenting the change in understanding among Puritans of what it means to be a member of a church Morgan described the Puritan as doing right in a world that does wrong Caught between the ideals of God s Law and the practical needs of the people John Winthrop walked a line few could tread 12 American Revolution edit In The Stamp Act Crisis 1953 and The Birth of the Republic 1956 Morgan rejected the Progressive interpretation of the American Revolution and its assumption that the rhetoric of the Patriots was mere claptrap Instead Morgan returned to the interpretation first set out by George Bancroft a century before that the patriots were deeply motivated by a commitment to liberty Historian Mark Egnal argues that The leading neo Whig historians Edmund Morgan and Bernard Bailyn underscore this dedication to whiggish principles although with variant readings For Morgan the development of the patriots beliefs was a rational clearly defined process 13 Slavery edit In his 1975 book American Slavery American Freedom Morgan explored the American paradox the marriage of slavery and freedom 14 Human relations among us still suffer from the former enslavement of a large portion of our predecessors The freedom of the free the growth of freedom experienced in the American Revolution depended more than we like to admit on the enslavement of more than 20 percent of us at that time How republican freedom came to be supported at least in large part by its opposite slavery is the subject of this book 15 Morgan claimed that large Virginia plantation owners exerted an outsized influence on poorer white Virginians and their attitude toward the racial divide color line which made it possible for Virginian white men as a group to become more politically equal Aristocrats could more safely preach equality in a slave society than in a free one 16 In a controversial passage Morgan suggests Virginia s poor whites felt no racial superiority to poor blacks He does this by providing evidence that in 17th century Virginia poor white indentured servants and black slaves frequently cooperated with each other and worked together Morgan cites the 1676 Bacon s Rebellion as evidence of a surprising racial egalitarianism among the poor since Bacon incorporated runaway black slaves into his army Despite the assertions of such writers as Michelle Alexander 17 however Morgan does not state that Bacon s Rebellion was the reason that rich landowners stopped purchasing white indentured servants and started increasing their purchase of black slaves rather regional changes in labor economics was the reason black slaves began to replace white servants during the early 1600s white servants cost less per unit labor than black slaves did but by the latter 1600s the situation reversed itself and black slaves became the more economical investment 18 And as Morgan states The planters who bought slaves instead of servants did not do so with any apparent consciousness of the social stability to be gained thereby Indeed insofar as Virginians expressed themselves on the subject of slavery they feared that it would magnify the danger of insurrection in the colony 19 As events evolved however the rising number of black slaves and the virtual end to the importation of indentured servants did stabilize Virginia society And as time went on according to Morgan Virginia politicians learned to further pacify poor whites by fostering a sense of white superiority 20 Racism made it possible for white Virginians to develop a devotion to the equality that English republicans had declared to be the soul of liberty 21 That is according to Morgan white men in Virginia were able to become much more politically equal and cohesive than would have been possible without a population of low status black slaves 22 Anthony S Parent commented American historians of our generation admire Edmund Morgan s American Slavery American Freedom more than any other monograph Morgan resuscitated American history by placing black slavery and white freedom as its central paradox 23 In 2002 Morgan published a surprise New York Times Bestseller Benjamin Franklin which dispels the myth of a comfortable old gentleman staring out at the world over his half glasses with benevolent comprehension of everything in it revealing his true mental makeup With a wisdom about himself that comes only to the great of heart Franklin knew how to value himself and what he did without mistaking himself for something more than one man among many His special brand of self respect required him to honor his fellow men and women no less than himself Legacy and impact editAfter examining his writings University of North Florida historian wrote David T Courtwright wrote that They are based on exhaustive research in primary sources emphasize human agency as against historicist forces and are written in precise and graceful prose This combination of rigor empathy and lucidity is intended for and has succeeded in capturing a broad audience Morgan is read by secondary school students undergraduates and graduate students as well as by his specialist peers some sixty of whom were trained in his seminars 24 Massachusetts Institute of Technology American history professor Pauline Maier wrote As a historian of colonial and revolutionary America he was one of the giants of his generation and a writer who could well have commanded a larger nonacademic audience than I suspect he received He characteristically took on big issues and had a knack for conveying complex sophisticated truths in a way that made them seem if not simple at least easily understandable 5 Brooklyn College history professor Benjamin L Carp describes Morgan as one of the great historians of early America with a formidable influence on academic and popular audiences 25 Jill Lepore called Morgan one of the most influential American historians of the 20th century 26 According to Joseph Ellis Morgan was revered by other members of the profession 27 Historian and author William Hogeland affirms Morgan s success in enshrining a consensus approach to U S history where colonists ideas rather than their possible economic interests were worthy of inspection by 20th century historians 28 He was out to define something essential in the American character and thereby create a new master narrative and to achieve that end he concocted a false portrayal of the colonists petitions Hogeland wrote The essayist Ta Nehisi Coates credits Morgan with greatly influencing his own views about race in American history 29 Awards and honors editMorgan was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 1964 30 and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1966 31 In 1971 Morgan was awarded the Yale chapter of Phi Beta Kappa s William Clyde DeVane Medal for outstanding teaching and scholarship considered one of the most prestigious teaching prizes for Yale faculty In 1971 1972 Morgan served as president of the Organization of American Historians 32 In 1972 he became the first recipient of the Douglass Adair Memorial Award for scholarship in early American history and in 1986 he received the Distinguished Scholar Award of the American Historical Association He has also won numerous fellowships and garnered a number of honorary degrees and named lectureships In 1965 he became a Sterling Professor one of Yale s highest distinctions Morgan was awarded the 2000 National Humanities Medal by U S President Bill Clinton at a ceremony for extraordinary contributions to American cultural life and thought In 2006 he received a special Pulitzer Prize for a creative and deeply influential body of work as an American historian that spans the last half century 33 In 2008 the American Academy of Arts and Letters honored him with a gold medal for lifetime achievement Books editThe Puritan Family Religion and Domestic Relations in 17th Century New England 1944 read online Virginians at Home Family Life in the Eighteenth Century 1952 The Stamp Act Crisis Prologue to Revolution 1953 with Helen M Morgan The Birth of the Republic 1763 89 1956 4th ed 2012 read online The Puritan Dilemma The Story of John Winthrop 1958 read online The American Revolution A Review of Changing Interpretations 1958 The Mirror of the Indian 1958 Editor Prologue to the Revolution Sources and Documents on the Stamp Act Crisis 1764 1766 1959 The Gentle Puritan A Life of Ezra Stiles 1727 1795 1962 read online The National Experience A History of the United States 1963 coauthor of textbook several editions Visible Saints The History of a Puritan Idea 1963 Editor The Founding of Massachusetts Historians and the Sources 1964 The American Revolution Two Centuries of Interpretation 1965 Puritan Political Ideas 1558 1794 1965 read online The Diary of Michael Wigglesworth 1653 1657 The Conscience of a Puritan 1965 The Puritan Family 1944 1966 Roger Williams The Church and the State 1967 read online So What About History 1969 American Slavery American Freedom The Ordeal of Colonial Virginia 1975 The Meaning of Independence John Adams George Washington and Thomas Jefferson 1976 reprint with new foreword 2004 The Genius of George Washington 1980 Inventing the People The Rise of Popular Sovereignty in England and America 1988 Benjamin Franklin Yale University Press 2002 read online The Genuine Article A Historian Looks at Early America 2004 selected review essays from New York Review of Books read online American Heroes Profiles of Men and Women Who Shaped Early America 2009 biographical essays read onlineSelected articles editMorgan Edmund S 1937 The Case against Anne Hutchinson The New England Quarterly 10 4 635 649 doi 10 2307 359929 JSTOR 359929 Morgan Edmund S 1942 The Puritans and Sex The New England Quarterly 15 4 591 607 doi 10 2307 361501 JSTOR 361501 Morgan Edmund S 1948 Colonial Ideas of Parliamentary Power 1764 1766 The William and Mary Quarterly 5 3 311 341 doi 10 2307 1923462 JSTOR 1923462 Morgan Edmund S 1948 Thomas Hutchinson and the Stamp Act The New England Quarterly 21 4 459 492 doi 10 2307 361566 JSTOR 361566 Morgan Edmund S 1950 The Postponement of the Stamp Act The William and Mary Quarterly 7 3 353 392 doi 10 2307 1917228 JSTOR 1917228 Morgan Edmund S 1954 Ezra Stiles The Education of a Yale Man 1742 1746 Huntington Library Quarterly 17 3 251 268 doi 10 2307 3816428 JSTOR 3816428 Morgan Edmund S 1957 The American Revolution Revisions in Need of Revising The William and Mary Quarterly 14 1 3 15 doi 10 2307 1917368 JSTOR 1917368 Morgan Edmund S 1957 Ezra Stiles and Timothy Dwight Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society 72 101 117 JSTOR 25080517 Morgan Edmund S 1967 The Puritan Ethic and the American Revolution The William and Mary Quarterly 24 1 4 43 doi 10 2307 1920560 JSTOR 1920560 Morgan Edmund S 1971 The First American Boom Virginia 1618 to 1630 The William and Mary Quarterly 28 2 170 198 doi 10 2307 1917308 JSTOR 1917308 Morgan Edmund S 1971 The Labor Problem at Jamestown 1607 18 The American Historical Review 76 3 595 611 doi 10 2307 1851619 JSTOR 1851619 Morgan Edmund S 1972 Slavery and Freedom The American Paradox The Journal of American History 59 1 5 29 doi 10 2307 1888384 JSTOR 1888384 Morgan Edmund S 1983 The World and William Penn Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 127 5 291 315 JSTOR 986499 Morgan Edmund S 1986 Safety in Numbers Madison Hume and the Tenth Federalist Huntington Library Quarterly 49 2 95 112 doi 10 2307 3817178 JSTOR 3817178 Morgan Edmund S 1987 John Winthrop s Modell of Christian Charity in a Wider Context Huntington Library Quarterly 50 2 145 151 doi 10 2307 3817255 JSTOR 3817255 Notes edit Feeney Mark 2013 07 10 Edmund Morgan 97 professor leading historian of Colonial era The Boston Globe Archived from the original on 2018 02 25 a b Thomas S Kidd 2013 07 16 The Historical Genius of Edmund Morgan Anxious Bench Retrieved 2018 02 25 Associated Press 2013 07 10 Edmund S Morgan dies at 97 scholar on early America Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on 2018 02 25 Murrin John M 2000 Edmund S Morgan University of Missouri Press Google EBook ISBN 9780826213167 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help a b c d Grimes William 2013 07 09 Edmund S Morgan Historian Who Shed Light on Puritans Dies at 97 The New York Times Archived from the original on 2018 02 25 Schudel Matt 2013 07 10 Edmund S Morgan historian of early America dies at 97 The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Archived from the original on 2018 02 25 Hattem Michael D 2013 08 05 Roundtable The Legacy of Edmund S Morgan The Junto Archived from the original on 2018 02 25 Courtland pp 349 50 Morgan Edmund S 2004 The Genuine Article A Historian Looks at Early America W W Norton amp Company pp ix x ISBN 0393059200 Introduction to the Papers of Benjamin Franklin The American Philosophical Society and Yale University 2005 Retrieved September 22 2022 Van Beek Elizabeth T 1999 Morgan Edmund S in Kelly Boyd ed Encyclopedia of Historians and Historical Writing vol 2 p 837 ISBN 1 884964 33 8 Butler Jon December 2013 In Memoriam Edmund Sears Morgan 1916 2013 Perspectives on History American Historical Association Archived from the original on 2018 02 25 Marc Egnal 2010 A Mighty Empire The Origins of the American Revolution Cornell University Press pp 3 5 ISBN 978 0801476587 Morgan Edmund S 1975 American Slavery American Freedom p 5 Morgan American Slavery American Freedom pp Preface Morgan American Slavery American Freedom 2nd ed p 380 Alexander Michelle 2012 The New Jim Crow The New Press pp 29 30 ISBN 978 1595586438 The systematic enslavement of Africans emerged with all deliberate speed quickened by events such as Bacon s Rebellion In an effort to protect their superior status and economic position the planters shifted their strategy for maintaining dominance They abandoned their heavy reliance on indentured servants in favor of the importation of more black slaves Morgan American Slavery American Freedom pp 297 99 Why did Virginians not furnish themselves with slaves as soon as they began to grow tobacco Why did they wait so long to import large numbers of black slaves The answer lies in the fact that slave labor was actually not as advantageous as indentured labor during the first half of the century The point at which it became more advantageous for Virginians to buy slaves was probably reached by 1660 Morgan American Slavery American Freedom p 308 Morgan American Slavery American Freedom p 328 If freemen with disappointed hopes should make common cause with slaves of desperate hope the results might be worse than anything Bacon had done The answer to the problem obvious if unspoken and only gradually recognized was racism Morgan American Slavery American Freedom p 386 Morgan American Slavery American Freedom p 386 Anthony S Parent 2003 Foul Means The Formation of a Slave Society in Virginia 1660 1740 University of North Carolina Press p 1 ISBN 9780807854860 David T Courtwright Fifty Years of American History An Interview with Edmund S Morgan William and Mary Quarterly 1987 p 336 Carp Benjamin L March 2016 Edmund S Morgan and the Urgency of Good Leadership Reviews in American History 44 1 1 18 doi 10 1353 rah 2016 0014 S2CID 147313665 Archived from the original on 2018 02 25 Jill Lepore 2013 07 10 Tell Me What You See Jill Lepore Salutes Historian Edmund S Morgan The Daily Beast Archived from the original on 2018 02 25 Joseph Ellis 2013 07 10 Author Joseph J Ellis Pays Tribute to Edmund S Morgan Newsweek Archived from the original on 2018 02 25 Hogeland William 25 January 2021 Against the Consensus Approach to History The New Republic ISSN 0028 6583 Retrieved 27 January 2021 Ta Nehisi Coates 2017 09 29 We should have seen Trump coming The Guardian APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved 2022 11 03 Edmund Sears Morgan American Academy of Arts amp Sciences Retrieved 2022 11 03 Past Officers of the OAH Organization of American Historians Archived from the original on 2012 06 10 2006 Special Award Pulitzer Prize Further reading editCarp Benjamin L Edmund S Morgan and the Urgency of Good Leadership Reviews in American History 44 1 2016 1 18 Courtwright David T 1987 Fifty Years of American History An Interview with Edmund S Morgan The William and Mary Quarterly 44 2 336 369 doi 10 2307 1939669 JSTOR 1939669 Liddle William D Edmund S Morgan 1916 in Clyde N Wilson ed Twentieth Century American Historians Dictionary of Literary Biography vol XVII Detroit 1983 pp 285 95 Middlekauff Robert In Memoriam Edmund S Morgan 1916 2013 New England Quarterly 96 4 2013 pp 685 687 online Murrin John M Edmund S Morgan in Robert Allen Rutland ed Clio s Favorites Leading Historians of the United States 1945 2000 U of Missouri Press 2000 pp 126 137 Nawotka Edward December 2002 Edmund Morgan The Historian s Historian Publishers Weekly 249 49 57 Grimes William 9 July 2013 Edmund S Morgan Historian Who Shed Light on Puritans Dies at 97 The New York Times Washington Post obituary Boston Globe obituary American Historical Association obituary Obituary by Thomas Kidd Obituary by Jill LeporeExternal links editMorgan Bio at Yale Morgan bio on History News Network Morgan author page and archive from The New York Review of Books Appearances on C SPAN Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Edmund Morgan historian amp oldid 1205633879, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.