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Not Your Founding Father: How a Nonbinary Minister Became America's Most Radical Revolutionary

Not Your Founding Father: How a Nonbinary Minister Became America's Most Radical Revolutionary

by Nina Sankovitch

Simon & Schuster ·2026 ·400 pages ·History
Maybe Someday
Maybe Someday
I Index
43/99
Maybe Someday

40/99

Critics

Maybe Someday

46/99

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Scholars

46/99

Rating

34/99

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41/99

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About This Book

A thrilling celebration of a forgotten early American renegade, Not Your Founding Father reconsiders just how radical the American experiment could have been.Early in the morning of October 9, 1776—in the small farming community of Cumberland, Rhode Island, in a house surrounded by cherry trees—twenty-three-year-old Jemima Wilkinson died, and the Public Universal Friend was born. Old Cherry Wilkinson's children had already gained a reputation for scandal. Two of his boys had been dismissed from the local Quaker meeting for joining the colonial militia, and one of the girls was expelled for having a baby out of wedlock. Now, here was another Wilkinson child, riding about the countryside, claiming to be a genderless messenger of God. Yet something about the Public Universal Friend set war-ravaged New England ablaze. The young minister seemed to embody the possibilities offered by the new nation, especially the right to total self-determination. To authorities, however, the minister was "the devil in petticoats," a threat to the men who sought to keep America's power for themselves. And so the Public Universal Friend ventured west to create an Eden on the frontier, a place where everyone would have the right to not only life, liberty, and the pursuit happiness, but also peace and shared prosperity. But into every Eden comes a snake. And soon, financial scams, contested wills, adultery, plagiarism, allegations of murder, and murmurs of another war with England would threaten to destroy this new American utopia.


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Reviews

"An excellent account ..."

Philip Janowski· The Chicago Review of Books Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"Highly recommended for anyone interested in early U.S."

Library Journal Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"A surprising episode of American history."

Kirkus Read review ↗ Near the Top

"Sankovitch avoids using any pronouns when referring to the minister, a choice that has surprisingly little impact on the smoothness of her prose."

Dan Piepenbring· Harpers Read review ↗ Maybe Someday

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