The Fire of Liberty.

By Esmond Wright

ISBN: 9781557865885

Printed: 1983

Publisher: Folio Society. London

Dimensions 17 × 25 × 2.5 cm
Language

Language: English

Size (cminches): 17 x 25 x 2.5

£15.00
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Description

Red cloth binding with silver title on the spine. Blue and silver American president’s emblem on front board.

It is the intent of F.B.A. to provide an in-depth photographic presentation of this book offered so to almost stimulate your feel and touch on the book. If requested, more traditional book descriptions are immediately available. 

The Fire of Liberty compiled, edited and introduced by Edmund Wright with prints, portraits & paintings of various people and battles, published by The Folio Society. A really interesting book, this is a compilation of excerpts from first person accounts, diaries, letters and memoirs, from both the American and British perspectives, on the War of Independence in all it’s aspects: civil, ideological and military. As such this offers a first-hand look at U.S independence via reports of the men and women who fought in America’s Revolutionary War.

Esmond Wright (5 November 1915, Newcastle upon Tyne – 9 August 2003, Masham, North Yorkshire) was an English historian of the United States, Director of the Institute of United States Studies at the University of London from 1971 to 1983, a television personality, author, and a Conservative politician.

Wright had a grammar school education in Newcastle upon Tyne, before winning an open scholarship to Durham University and, in 1938, a Commonwealth Fund Fellowship to the University of Virginia. Wright joined the University of Glasgow in 1946 as a lecturer in History. In 1957 he was appointed Professor of Modern History, a post he held until his election to parliament ten years later. His students at Glasgow included future Labour Party Leader John Smith and Donald Dewar, later the first First Minister of Scotland. During this time he became known in both Scotland and England with his obituary in The Independent describing him as one of Britain’s ‘early “media dons”‘.

In a 1967 by-election, he was returned as a Conservative Member of Parliament for the previously Labour-held seat of Glasgow Pollok. Wright defeated Dick Douglas, who would later have two spells as a Labour MP and defect to the Scottish National Party. Wright reportedly had ‘no strong political ambitions’ and had apparently not expected to win the contest. He was defeated by Labour’s James White in the 1970 General Election. Tam Dalyell believed had Wright retained his seat, he might well have been a Treasury minister in the Heath Ministry.

After his defeat Wright returned to academia becoming Director of the Institute of US Studies and Professor of American History at the University of London in 1971, a post he held until 1983. He was also Principal of Swinton Conservative College in Masham from 1972 until 1976.

He was awarded the Benjamin Franklin Medal in 1988, reportedly, the award that gave him ‘greatest pleasure’. In 1981 he delivered the British Academy’s Sarah Tryphena Phillips Lecture in American Literature and History.

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