William R. Hancock

The Specter of Oliver Cromwell in American Political Discourse, 1660โ€“1860

Department of English

(Graduate Resident Summer 2025)

Oliver Cromwell never stepped foot on the North American continent, yet he cast a long shadow over colonial America and the early republic. My dissertation project seeks to explain why, in the two hundred years following Cromwellโ€™s death, Americans invoked his memory during moments of crisis. Cromwell continually reemerged in early American political discourse as a potent symbolโ€”both of muscular captaincy and of despotic usurpationโ€”at pivotal junctures in American history. These junctures were moments of explosive political violence: King Philipโ€™s War and the Salem witch trials; the French and Indian War and the American Revolution; the war of 1812 and the controversies of the Jacksonian Era; and the conflicts over immigration and slavery in the tumultuous decades leading up to the American Civil War. Americans turned to the blood-soaked rise and fall of the Cromwellian project in England and discovered an idiom for articulating anxieties regarding liberty and tyranny. My dissertation argues that Cromwell emerged out of Americansโ€™ historical memory of the seventeenth-century English past as an avatar either of libertyโ€™s violent defense or of its violent suppression.