The Pox and the Covenant

The Pox and the Covenant
About this book
A covenant of life and death. For 100 years, God had held to his promise, and the colonists had as well: live uncorrupted lives or suffer divine wrath. But on April 22, 1721, the arrival of one doomed ship in Boston's harbors unleashed a deadly smallpox epidemic that put this covenant to its greatest test. The fierce debate over how to combat the growing tragedy quickly became a battle between faith and reason that would reshape the colonists' view of their destiny, setting a new course for America and inciting the first drumbeats of revolution. The Pox and the Covenant is the story of well-known figures such as Cotton Mather, James Franklin, and a young Benjamin Franklin struggling to fight for their cause amidst the chaos of death and panic -- although not always for the side one would expect - Back cover.
Details
- OL Work ID
- OL17110365W
Subjects
Mather, cotton, 1663-1728Franklin, benjamin, 1706-1790SmallpoxBoston (mass.), social conditions