Angelica For love and country in a time of revolution

Molly Beer

Book - 2025

Through the extraordinary life of Angelica Schuyler Church, a politically astute and socially influential figure, this story reveals how women shaped early American history through diplomacy, personal networks and a strategic presence in key revolutionary moments.

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Subjects
Genres
Biography
Biographies
Published
New York, NY : W.W. Norton & Company [2025]
Language
English
Main Author
Molly Beer (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
x, 320 pages : maps ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 275-303) and index.
ISBN
9781324050216
  • Author's Note
  • Part 1. Colony of New York
  • Chapter 1. Engeltje, 1755-1756
  • Chapter 2. A Colonial Girl
  • Chapter 3. The Spirit of Riots, 1766
  • Chapter 4. The Bewilderment of Liberty: Or, a Political Education
  • Part 2. War for Independence
  • Chapter 5. The General's Daughter, 1775
  • Chapter 6. Loyalties and Petty Treasons
  • Chapter 7. The Breach of the Fortress of Ticonderoga, 1777
  • Chapter 8. Join or Die
  • Chapter 9. The Maiden Voyage of the Angelica
  • Chapter 10. Independency and Happiness, 1778-1779
  • Chapter 11. A Change of Situation, 1780-1781
  • Chapter 12. Home Front
  • Chapter 13. Esprit de Corps
  • Chapter 14. The Long Road from Yorktown, 1781-1783
  • Part 3. American Abroad
  • Chapter 15. Siècle des Lumières / The Age of Enlightenment, 1783
  • Chapter 16. Social Fabric
  • Chapter 17. A Separate Peace, 1784-1785
  • Chapter 18. A "Charming Coterie," 1786-1787
  • Chapter 19. Constitutional Convention, Paris, 1788
  • Chapter 20. Summer in New York, 1789
  • Chapter 21. Head Full of Politicks, 1790-1792
  • Chapter 22. The House on Sackville Street, 1793-1796
  • Part 4. The New "United" States
  • Chapter 23. The Fair American, 1796-1799
  • Chapter 24. Mother/Country
  • Chapter 25. Purchase, 1802-1804
  • Chapter 26. Hair Triggers, 1804
  • Chapter 27. "The Country of Angelica"
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

Beer's first book is an insightful biography of Angelica Schuyler Church. Born in 1756 in Albany, New York, she grew up in the heart of the American Revolution. Her father, Philip Schuyler, was a major general in George Washington's Continental Army; because of his prominence, Angelica met many Revolutionary fighters and leaders. Her husband, John Carter (later John Church), was a British native whose business was "a primary spigot through which actual hard money flowed into the country." They experienced the chaos of the Revolutionary War and the early days of independence in Boston and New York before moving to France in 1783. Although she held no official position, in Paris and later in London, "Angelica still saw herself as an American patriot, as a de facto representative of the United States." Her intelligence and social diplomacy impressed many, including Thomas Jefferson, the Marquis de Lafayette, and her brother-in-law, Alexander Hamilton. Beer's empathetic and well-researched history centers Angelica Church as a woman in the early U.S., a time of revolution that also required contending with disease, infant mortality, and prolonged separations from family and loved ones. A must-read, especially for lovers of Hamilton.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A woman navigates revolution. Making an engaging book debut, Beer recounts the eventful life of Angelica Schuyler Church (1756-1814), the eldest of eight children born into a wealthy and influential Dutch family. Her mother was a van Rensselaer; her family tree included Livingstons and van Cortlandts. Like other aristocratic colonial families, hers owned slaves, an unquestioned economic necessity even for those who cried out for liberty. Contradictions and roiling politics defined her life: She was 19 when the colonies petitioned for independence, and her father, Philip Schuyler, soon became a commander of the Continental Army. Their Albany home became a meeting place for leaders of the revolution. As Angelica witnessed upheaval around her, she boldly upended her life. Although her family hoped she would marry a man of her class and means, she became attracted to John Carter, an English émigré, a man with "languid blue eyes and passionate political opinions." He had no family connections, no estate or hope of one, and no fortune, to all of which her parents objected. Faced with the choice of submitting to parental authority or rebelling, she made a fateful decision. She and Carter eloped. She learned that Carter had changed his name from Church to avoid paying creditors after he went bankrupt in England; his later financial success supplying American and French troops made it possible for him to repay his debts and reclaim his name. Angelica Carter became Mrs. Church. In Boston, Newport, Paris, and London, she moved in the same aristocratic circles into which she was born. Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jefferson were close friends in Paris; her brother-in-law was Alexander Hamilton. She was godmother to his daughter. Beer draws on abundant archival sources to portray a shrewd, observant woman whose perspective affords a fresh look at her times. A brisk and vivid history. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.