An Integrated Approach to American Revolution Biographies: III. Loyalists
Document Type
Poster
Campus where you would like to present
Ellensburg
Event Website
https://digitalcommons.cwu.edu/source
Start Date
18-5-2020
Abstract
There are many analyses of the American Revolutionary founders, however there are few that analyze them as a group with respect to quantitative analyses. There is a growing utilization of statistical and network analysis in history that can now deliver new perspectives and the American Revolution is an excellent research area, particularly the people who created the revolution and those that resisted the revolution. This preliminary study is one of three papers based on the full dataset of over 700 individuals with 219 possible attributes including categories such as birth/death (date, location), kinship, careers, education, organizational memberships, occupations, positions, key events, among others. This paper is specifically based around the prominent Loyalists in the American Revolution (N=112), this includes military personnel, politicians, and those who switched sides during the war, e.g., John Graves Simcoe, Benedict Swingate Calvert, and Benedict Arnold. The analysis used an integrated approach that combined statistics, cluster analysis, geospatial analysis, network analyses (centralities, cohesion, linkage maps, ego networks) and an example micro-case study of an intriguing individual that typifies the possibilities of integrated approaches. It also is important to present what were common factors such as generation, common educational institutions, geospatial factors, and affiliations. Considering the importance and relevance to past and present US History, it is crucial to further explore the American Revolution with new approaches that can help us find fresh understandings that may be relevant and useful even in the 21st century.
Recommended Citation
Hasz, Barton, "An Integrated Approach to American Revolution Biographies: III. Loyalists" (2020). Symposium Of University Research and Creative Expression (SOURCE). 24.
https://digitalcommons.cwu.edu/source/2020/CAH/24
Department/Program
History
Additional Mentoring Department
https://cwu.studentopportunitycenter.com/2020/04/an-integrated-approach-to-american-revolution-biographies-iii-loyalists/
An Integrated Approach to American Revolution Biographies: III. Loyalists
Ellensburg
There are many analyses of the American Revolutionary founders, however there are few that analyze them as a group with respect to quantitative analyses. There is a growing utilization of statistical and network analysis in history that can now deliver new perspectives and the American Revolution is an excellent research area, particularly the people who created the revolution and those that resisted the revolution. This preliminary study is one of three papers based on the full dataset of over 700 individuals with 219 possible attributes including categories such as birth/death (date, location), kinship, careers, education, organizational memberships, occupations, positions, key events, among others. This paper is specifically based around the prominent Loyalists in the American Revolution (N=112), this includes military personnel, politicians, and those who switched sides during the war, e.g., John Graves Simcoe, Benedict Swingate Calvert, and Benedict Arnold. The analysis used an integrated approach that combined statistics, cluster analysis, geospatial analysis, network analyses (centralities, cohesion, linkage maps, ego networks) and an example micro-case study of an intriguing individual that typifies the possibilities of integrated approaches. It also is important to present what were common factors such as generation, common educational institutions, geospatial factors, and affiliations. Considering the importance and relevance to past and present US History, it is crucial to further explore the American Revolution with new approaches that can help us find fresh understandings that may be relevant and useful even in the 21st century.
https://digitalcommons.cwu.edu/source/2020/CAH/24
Faculty Mentor(s)
Marilyn Levine