A Town Divided: Deerfield in the Age of Revolution
As in other communities, Deerfield’s citizens struggled to adapt to an everchanging social, political, and economic landscape as rebellion and war affected villages far from urban centers and coastal cities. In Deerfield, which was evenly split between Loyalists and Whigs, conflicts between neighbors upturned lives and polarized the community. By expanding and interpreting Deerfield’s stories, the exhibition investigates overlooked aspects of the Revolution, highlighting a period when Americans faced severe challenges but eventually emerged a new nation.
Objects, documents, and voices from the period allow us to access the urgency and uncertainty of the era. The ideals of equality and liberty engaged not only Loyalists and Whigs, but also rich and poor, women and children, African Americans (both free and enslaved), and Indigenous people.
This program is made possible by a grant from Mass Humanities, which provided funding through the Massachusetts Cultural Council.
https://www.historic-deerfield.org/events/a-town-divided-deerfield-in-the-age-of-revolution/
Image Currency: One Shilling Four Pence, engraved by Paul Revere, Jr. (1734–1818), Boston, MA, 1775. Ink on paper. HD 2016.808.