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What the Founders Never Said: A Beginner's Guide to the Most Persistent Myths, Misquotes, and Misconceptions About America's Founding Era, with Eviden - Ingram

What the Founders Never Said: A Beginner's Guide to the Most Persistent Myths, Misquotes, and Misconceptions About America's Founding Era, with Eviden

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Millions of Americans encounter famous Founders' quotes every day, on posters, in political speeches, in textbooks, and across social media.

Many of those quotes are fabrications. Others are real but stripped of context so thoroughly that they no longer mean what people think they mean. The problem is not new, but it spreads faster than ever.

This guide is built for readers who want to think more clearly about American history, without needing a graduate degree to do it. It focuses on the decades between 1760 and 1800, when the nation was formed and when the stories that have defined it ever since were first being told and retold.

The guide does not require any background in historical research. Instead, it provides a set of concrete, practical tools for any reader. These include frameworks for investigating whether a quote or story is authentic, checklists for spotting misattributed or fabricated claims, timelines showing when famous stories first appeared in print, and tables comparing what the Founders actually wrote to the most widely shared distortions.

Inside, readers will find chapter-length treatments of the most persistent problem areas: how to evaluate commonly cited Founders' quotes, how famous origin stories like the cherry tree tale were invented after the fact, how the Declaration and Constitution are regularly misquoted in political arguments, how Founders' views on religion have been distorted in both directions by competing agendas, how the historical record on slavery is routinely oversimplified, and how to use primary sources to verify any claim about the founding era.

The guide also addresses what historians genuinely do not know, and explains why acknowledging that uncertainty is a sign of intellectual honesty rather than weakness.

This is not a guide that argues the Founders were bad, or that patriotism is naive. It is a guide that argues accurate history is more interesting, more useful, and more worthy of respect than legend. The founding era is full of genuine drama, genuine conflict, and genuine complexity. The myths, in most cases, make it less interesting, not more.

Ideal for students, self-directed readers, educators preparing materials, and anyone who has shared a founding-era quote and later wondered whether it was real.

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