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Horse-Shoe Robinson

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Horse-Shoe Robinson
Major Butler and Horseshoe Robinson
AuthorJohn P. Kennedy
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
PublisherPhiladelphia: Carey, Lea & Blanchard / New York: Wiley and Long
Publication date
1835
Pages2 vol. (1835 U.S.); 3 vol. (1835 U.K.)

Horse-Shoe Robinson: A Tale of the Tory Ascendency is an 1835 novel by John P. Kennedy that was a popular seller in its day.[1][2]

The novel was Kennedy's second, and proved to be his most popular. It is a work of historical romance of the American Revolution, set in the western mountain areas of the Carolinas and Virginia,[3] culminating at the Battle of Kings Mountain.[4][5]

The primary characters of the novel include Francis Marion, Banastre Tarleton, General Charles Cornwallis, Horseshoe Robinson (so named because he was originally a blacksmith), Mary Musgrove and her lover John Ramsay, Henry and Mildred Lyndsay (patriots), Mildred's lover Arthur Butler (whom she secretly marries), and Habershaw with his gang of rogues and Indians.[6]

Play

The novel was adapted for the stage a number of times, but the best known were by Charles Dance in 1836, which starred actor James Henry Hackett, and a version created in 1856 by Clifton W. Tayleure titled Horseshoe Robinson, or the Battle of King's Mountain, which included William Ellis as Robinson and George C. Boniface as Major Arthur Butler.[7][8][9]

References

  1. ^ Hart, James D. The Popular Book: A History of America's Literary Taste, p. 305 (1951)
  2. ^ (July 1835) Literary Notices (book review), The Knickerbocker, Vol. VI, No. 1, p. 71
  3. ^ Lemon, Armistead. Summary, in Documenting the American South website, Retrieved 8 December 2014
  4. ^ (November 1835). Critical Notices (book review), The Western Monthly Magazine, p. 350
  5. ^ (September 1835). Miscellaneous Notices (book review), The American Quarterly Review, Vol. 18, pp. 240-42
  6. ^ Warner, Charles Dudley, ed. Library of the World's Best Literature, Vol. XXX, p.269 (1898)
  7. ^ Burt, Daniel S. The Chronology of American Literature, p. 205 (2004)
  8. ^ Bank, Rosemarie. Frontier Melodrama, in Ogden, Dunbar H. et al., Theatre West: Image and Impact, pp. 151-52 (1990)
  9. ^ Hischak, Thomas S. The Oxford Companion to American Theatre, p. 317 (2004)

External links

This page was last edited on 17 March 2023, at 05:02
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