Monday, January 22, 2024

Meet Author Timothy Symington “Huzza!” Toasting a New Nation, 1760-1815 #History #RevolutionaryWar #AmericanRevolution




I had to ask to Tim- what made you decide to try and be a published author?

TS: I never thought that I would actually write a book and have a publisher take a chance on it (McFarland Books…you are the best!). 

I am an avid reader, and I have plenty of experience as a writer of book reviews and as an editor of historical papers.  The idea of writing a history book was suggested to me by other people.  I was fortunate to have discovered a “niche” that no one else did:  writing history through the study of drinking toasts.  

When I started looking at these lists of toasts, it was only to complete my master’s dissertation.  But when I finished, I could not stop doing the research.  I wanted to learn more for its own sake.  

Some close friends and family members told me to see if a book could be made out of my work, giving me some direction.  

When I started writing things out, one idea became a chapter, and then there was another chapter, and soon a completed work was staring at me!

Tell Readers 10 Things About Timothy Symington

1.  Tim once stood next to the marble sarcophagus of George Washington inside His Excellency’s tomb at Mount Vernon.
2. Tim ran the Boston Marathon six times.
3. Tim gave 1353 shows when he worked as a dolphin trainer.
4. Tim has a permanent scar on his forearm, courtesy of a young sea lion.
5. Tim has acted professionally on stage and has even done one commercial.
6. Tim saw and waved at His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama from across the street.
7. Tim, a devoted Beatlemaniac, has seen concerts given by the two remaining Beatles.
8. Tim played solo guitar in front of an audience in the musical “Grease.”
9. Tim read over 90 books in 2023.
10.   Tim used to be active in Okinawan-Shorin-Ryu karate.

 

“Huzza!”  Toasting a New Nation, 1760-1815
Timothy Symington

Genre:  Nonfiction/History
Publisher:  McFarland Books
Date of Publication:  September 29, 2023
ISBN: 978-1-4766-9315-6 Print
ISBN: 978-1-4766-5056-2 ebook
ASIN: BOCK62JP5L
Number of pages: 273
Word Count: 125,000. 

Tagline: Drinking toasts to the American Revolution and beyond!

Book Description:

During the early years of the United States, toasts captured popular sentiments regarding people and events.  Sometimes they were used to spread national ideology and partisan political views.  They could even be “weaponized” against political opponents, such as during the bitter election between John Adams and Thomas Jefferson in 1800.  “Huzza!”  Toasting a New Nation, 1760-1815 is a retelling of the familiar historical narrative, but toasts are used to tell the story of the events and people between the American Revolution and the War of 1812.



Excerpt:
     Israel Putnam of Connecticut, who led the rebels at Bunker Hill in June, was one of the first to be singled out for honors when the war began. The Connecticut Gazette printed toasts from a July 25 dinner in London attended by the Freeholders of Middlesex. General Putnam was toasted “and all those American Heroes, who, like men, nobly prefer death to slavery and chains.” Sons of Liberty leader Dr. Joseph Warren, who was killed on the battlefield, received the following toast from the Field Officers of the Sixth Brigade in Cambridge: “Immortal Honor to that Patriot and Hero Doctor Joseph Warren, and the Brave American troops, who fought the Battle of Charlestown on the 17th of June 1775.” This list of toasts, appearing in the August 21, 1775, issue of the Boston Gazette, or Country Journal started with a toast to the Continental Congress instead of to the British monarch. The officers raised their glasses instead to all the colonies, the Stamp Act riots, Lexington and Concord, and an end to the “present unhappy Disputes.” Dr. Warren would be a consistently toasted figure into the early 1800s.
     George Washington replaced George III as the main recipient of toasts, becoming the most toasted individual in the new nation. The King was now the enemy. Even English supporters of colonial rights, such as John Wilkes and Edmund Burke, were replaced by American military heroes. English support for the rights of the colonists, however, had not disappeared. The Virginia Gazette printed toasts the London Association made in October 1775. Association members wished for “axes and halters, at public expence, to all those who attempt to trample on the liberties of their fellow subjects, either in Great Britain or America,” and that “kings remember that they were made for their subjects, and not their subjects for them.”
     The former British corset-maker Thomas Paine brilliantly explained why the colonists should no longer rely on the King to protect their liberties. His pamphlet, Common Sense, demanded that Americans free themselves of Britain’s control. Paine wrote that “One of the strongest natural proofs of the folly of hereditary right in Kings, is that nature disapproves it, otherwise she would not so frequently turn it into ridicule, by giving mankind an Ass for a Lion.” His words reached everyone in the colonies, and so he and his work were toasted: “May the INDEPENDENT principles of COMMON SENSE be confirmed throughout the United Colonies.”
     Most colonies had already taken Paine’s advice to heart and declared themselves to be independent states. Members of the Virginia convention calling for a resolution for national independence gave toasts in May: “The American independent states” and “The Grand Congress of the United States, and their respected legislatures.” Washington attended a feast at the Queen’s Head Tavern in New York City, where toasts were given to the Continental Congress and the American army, and to the memory of General Richard Montgomery, killed in the disastrous invasion of Quebec in December 1775. The final toast was “to ‘Civil and religious liberty to all mankind’—mankind, that is, except Tories.” Tories, the conservative supporters of the Crown, received extra abuse in the Patriots’ toasts: “Sore Eyes to all Tories, and a Chestnut Burr for an Eye Stone.”




About the Author:

Timothy Symington received his Bachelor of Arts degree in History from Saint Anselm College and his Master of Arts degree in American History from Adams State University.  A former educator, he now contributes to the Journal of the American Revolution.  “Huzza!”  Toasting a New Nation, 1760-1815 is his first book.












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