The Specter of Oliver Cromwell in American Political Discourse, 1660โ1860
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 Cromwellโs death, Americans invoked his memory during moments of crisis. Cromwell continually reemerged in early American political discourse as a potent symbolโboth of muscular captaincy and of despotic usurpationโat pivotal junctures in American history. These junctures were moments of explosive political violence: King Philipโs 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 libertyโs violent defense or of its violent suppression.