123 Quotes by Nathaniel Philbrick

  • Author Nathaniel Philbrick
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    Some Englishmen privately admitted that if the Narragansetts had chosen to join Philip in July, all would have been lost. As the Nipmucks assailed them from the west, the far more powerful Narragansetts might have stormed up from the south, and Boston would have been overrun by a massive pan-Indian army. But instead of acknowledging the debt they owed the Narragansetts, the Puritans resolved to wipe them out.

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  • Author Nathaniel Philbrick
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    A total of about 200,000 Americans had served in the war, but that did not mean the rest of the country of about 3 million would show them any gratitude or respect. Americans in 1783 were desperate to put the trauma of the Revolution behind them, and these broken and penniless soldiers were a daily reminder of what they preferred to forget. “What scornful looks and hard words have I experienced,” Martin wrote forty-seven years later. “I hope I shall one day find land enough to lay my bones.

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  • Author Nathaniel Philbrick
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    During the forty-five months of World War II, the United States lost just under 1 percent of its adult male population; during the Civil War the casualty rate was somewhere between 4 and 5 percent; during the fourteen months of King Philip’s War, Plymouth Colony lost close to 8 percent of its men.

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  • Author Nathaniel Philbrick
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    In a letter to Benjamin Franklin he described how the explosion of the Augusta created a cloud like none other he had ever seen: “a thick smoke rising like a pillar and spreading from the top like a tree.” It did not become the symbol of a new and terrible age of destruction for another 168 years, but in the fall of 1777 the skyline of Philadelphia was darkened by the shadow of the mushroom cloud.

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  • Author Nathaniel Philbrick
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    They were too focused on their own inner lives to appreciate the subtleties of character that might have alerted them to the true motives of those who did not share in their beliefs. Time and time again during their preparations to sail for America, the Pilgrims demonstrated an extraordinary talent for getting duped.

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  • Author Nathaniel Philbrick
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    Brown made a claim that possibly hit a little too close to home. ‘Money is this man’s god,’ the handbill read, ’and to get enough of it, he would sacrifice his country.

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  • Author Nathaniel Philbrick
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    In the years after the War of Independence, historian paid scant attention to the Siege of Fort Mifflin, primarily because, Martin believed ‘there was no Washington, Putnam, or Wayne there.’ ‘Had there been,’ he conjecture, ‘the affair would have been extolled to the skies.’ As Martin and the five hundred defenders of Fort Mifflin had learned first-hard, ’great men get great priase, little men nothing.

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  • Author Nathaniel Philbrick
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    Modern survival psychologists have determined that this “social” – as opposed to “authoritarian” – form of leadership is ill suited to the early stages of a disaster, when decisions must be made quickly and firmly. Only later, as the ordeal drags on and it is necessary to maintain morale, do social leadership skills become important.

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  • Author Nathaniel Philbrick
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    In 1836, the Lydia, a Nantucket whaleship, was struck and sunk by a sperm whale, as was the Two Generals a few years later.

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