The Black Boys Uprising of 1765: Traders, Troops & ?Rioters? during Pontiac?s War: Traders, Troops & ?Rioters? during Pontiac?s War by Dan Guzy Paperback Book

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Rent The Black Boys Uprising of 1765: Traders, Troops & ?Rioters? during Pontiac?s War: Traders, Troops & ?Rioters? during Pontiac?s War

Author: Dan Guzy

Format: Quality Paperback

Publisher: Conococheague Institute

Published: Sep 2014

Genre: History - United States - Colonial Period (1600-1775)

Pages: 154

Synopsis

For settlers trying to scratch out a livelihood along the Conococheague Creek in south-central Pennsylvania, the years during the French & Indian and Pontiac's wars were times of uncertainty and downright terror as Indians murdered, scalped and took captive their family members and neighbors. Then, as hostilities seemed to abate, came the word that unscrupulous traders were actually planning to supply ammunition and weaponry to the still-enemy Indians in violation of Pennsylvania law. Worse yet, these traders were receiving the protection of British troops, the same troops charged with safeguarding the settlers. The end result was the so-called Black Boys Rebellion, a conflict that Dan Guzy argues was not a rebellion at all but, instead, an uprising seeking to enforce civil law. In this fascinating work, largely based on primary resource material, Guzy tells the story of one of the first uprisings against British troops, years before the outbreak of Revolutionary War. In what is the most detailed account to date, Guzy corrects some mistakes made by other accounts, and describes the actions taken by the Black Boys and their opponents in context of political and military activities and other contemporary events.

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