Norman E. (Ned) Donoghue II is a skilled writer known for his clear and thoughtful analysis of law and politics. He explains how government, laws, and public policies connect, making complex topics easier to understand. His work is respected in discussions about Congress and politics.. DATA
Norman E. (Ned) Donoghue II is a skilled writer known for his clear and thoughtful analysis of law and politics. He explains how government, laws, and public policies connect, making complex topics easier to understand. His work is respected in discussions about Congress and politics.. DATA
Norman E. (Ned) Donoghue II is a skilled writer known for his clear and thoughtful analysis of law and politics. He explains how government, laws, and public policies connect, making complex topics easier to understand. His work is respected in discussions about Congress and politics.. DATA
Norman E. (Ned) Donoghue II is a skilled writer known for his clear and thoughtful analysis of law and politics. He explains how government, laws, and public policies connect, making complex topics easier to understand. His work is respected in discussions about Congress and politics.. DATA
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PORTRAIT of a PACIFIST as a PATRIOT The Pacifist Ordeal During the American Revolution, Jacob Brumbaugh's Life 1726-1799
Come find out why and how a member of the German Baptist Brethren pacifist sect became a “Patriot” of the American Revolution, recognized as such by Daughters of the American Revolution and the Society of Sons of the American Revolution. Dunkers refused to bear arms or to take an oath of allegiance. Their faith pledged to do violence to no man.
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For over 245 years, historians have ignored the incidents that pitted the Patriots against the leaders of the Philadelphia Yearly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers). Some publicly accused the Quaker leaders of being traitors to their country; they maintained they were merely following the principal tenets of their religious faith. The Patriots had no legal grounds to arrest them, but they did anyway. Rectifying this historical oversight is Norman E. “Ned” Donoghue’s new book, Prisoners of Congress: Philadelphia’s Quakers in Exile, 1777-1778, the untold story of the men who became among the nation’s first political prisoners, published by the Pennsylvania State University Press.
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New Book
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