Moreau de St. Mery's: American Journey 1793-1798
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$ 15.00
394 pp. An account of five years in post-revolution America, concentrating on the Frenchman who fled an arrest warrant in Paris and opened a bookstore in Philadelphia, which became a gathering place for other exiles. An important historical resource based largely on St. Mery's own journal. About the author: "Kenneth Lewis Roberts (December 8, 1885 – July 21, 1957) was an American author of historical novels. Roberts worked first as a journalist, becoming nationally known for his work with the Saturday Evening Post from 1919 to 1928, and then as a popular novelist. Born in Kennebunk, Maine, Roberts specialized in Regionalist historical fiction. He often wrote about his native state and its terrain, also depicting other upper New England states and scenes. For example, the heroes of Arundel and Rabble in Arms are from Kennebunk (then called Arundel), while Langdon Towne, the chief character of Roberts's Northwest Passage, is depicted as being from Portsmouth, New Hampshire. Roberts graduated from Cornell University in 1908, where he wrote the lyrics for two Cornell fight songs, including Fight for Cornell. He was also a member of the Quill and Dagger society. He was later awarded honorary doctorates from three New England universities: Dartmouth College in New Hampshire, Colby College in Maine and Middlebury College in Vermont...As a result of his research into the Arnold Expedition, Roberts published the nonfiction work March to Quebec: Journals of the Members of Arnold's Expedition, a compilation of various journals and letters written by participants in the march. During Roberts' research into Major Rogers, his researcher uncovered transcripts of both of Major Rogers' courts-martial (once as the accuser and once as the accused), which had been thought lost for over a century, and these were published in the second volume of a special two-volume edition of Northwest Passage. He and his wife Anna translated into English the French writer Médéric Louis Élie Moreau de Saint-Méry's account of his journey through America in the 1790s. In addition, his last published work was a brief history of the Battle of Cowpens, entitled The Battle of Cowpens, issued after his death in 1958."