“Mullins has crafted a first-rate intellectual biography. He writes with grace and clarity and does an excellent job contextualizing Mayhew and his thinking in a broader milieu.”—Early American Literature
"This work is both an addition to the canon of founding father works and a revision of existing interpretations of Mayhew. . . . Ultimately, Mullins convincingly argues for Mayhew’s place among the ideological progenitors of the American Revolution."—New England Quarterly
"Mullins brings vividly to life Boston’s hothouse political atmosphere, showing why Mayhew’s connections with influential members of his West Church put him at the center of agitation against the British administration, and spelling out with special clarity Mayhew’s long-term influence on leading thinkers of the Revolution like John Adams."—American Political Thought
"Father of Liberty is deeply researched and elegantly written."—The Historian
"Father of Liberty offers a compelling illustration of a familiar historical process: the important, even decisive, role that ministers, through a deft application of Calvinist theory to contemporary political events, played in disseminating and popularizing the Real Whig ideology."—H-Net Reviews
"Mullins’ broad, thorough archival research artfully reconstructs Mayhew’s life."—Tulsa Law Review
“Long before the first shots were fired at Lexington and Concord, the Reverend Jonathan Mayhew preached a message from his Boston pulpit that powerfully blended a defense of religious liberty with an emerging notion of constitutional resistance to British tyranny. His ideas shaped the thinking of future leaders of the American Revolution such as John Adams, James Otis, Robert Treat Paine, Josiah Quincy, Paul Revere, and many others. Seamlessly integrating political, intellectual, and religious history, Mullins’s elegant and illuminating study restores Mayhew to his rightful place in emergence of Revolutionary protest while also conveying the full complexity and originality of Mayhew’s thought.”—Rosemarie Zagarri, University Professor and Professor of History, George Mason University
“Father of Liberty imaginatively connects Massachusetts political history, including the events directly instigated by Mayhew, with the minister’s radical preaching. Mullins show how Mayhew, in attempting to recapture an elusive and virtuous past, propelled New Englanders into uncharted political and religious territory.”—Christopher Beneke, author of Beyond Toleration: The Religious Origins of American Pluralism
“The panegyrics of John Adams and Robert Treat Paine that the Rev. Jonathan Mayhew was instrumental in changing popular opinion in pre-Revolution America were not empty words. As Professor Mullins demonstrates with skill and flair, Mayhew obliged the revolutionary generation to consider rather than confront the inconvenient truths of their times: that religious faith and political cause were inextricably matters of individual liberty. Mayhew’s early death dimmed his visibility to posterity but not to contemporaries on both sides of the Atlantic who took to Mayhew’s rationalism and liberalism following the Great Awakening. Mayhew was much more than a popularizer of ideas or iconoclast of Loyalist propaganda. By the 1760s, he probably reached further than any preacher of his day. His sermons—delivered, printed, circulated, discussed, criticized, gossiped—nourished commonplace debates, helping to alter the “religious sentiments” Adams believed accompanied the political transformation. Mayhew was the forgotten hero of a generation fondly remembered for their own heroics.”—Colin Nicolson, author of The “Infamas Govener”: Francis Bernard and the Origins of the American Revolution