Wood and Felt
Since Pennsylvania experienced the most radical change in 1776, largely through the efforts of Scots-Irish farmers and urban artisans, Nash gives its new state constitution a good deal of attention. The constitution provided for a unicameral legislature, term limits, a broad suffrage, and a plural executive. The constitution also stipulated that the assembly be re-apportioned every seven years."This commitment to proportional representation," Nash observes,"was followed by no other state." It is a strange statement, since four other states--New Jersey, New York, Vermont, South Carolina--wrote into their constitutions specific plans for periodic adjustments of their representation, so that, as the New York constitution stated, it"shall for ever remain proportionate and adequate." This error is only one of many that Nash makes throughout his book. He mistakes Horace Walpole for his father Robert Walpole as prime minister of England. He writes that"American colonists, with rare exceptions, agreed that Parliament was entitled to pass external taxes meant to control the flow of trade," even though Edmund S. Morgan and Helen M. Morgan decisively refuted this point more than fifty years ago. He refers to Edmund Randolph as Jefferson's son-in-law, confusing him with Thomas Mann Randolph. He says that Richard Henry Lee was"destined to be one of Washington's generals," mixing him up with his cousin Harry Lee. Small matters, perhaps; but cumulatively they tend to undermine the reader's confidence in Nash's knowledge of the period.
Even in a narrative that treats political history as irrelevant to understanding the Revolution, such mistakes are remarkable.
On another matter entirely--for those interested in what Nixon himself had to say about Mark Felt, the Miller Center has posted some audio excerpts on its website.