TY - BOOK AU - Smith,William R. TI - Benjamin Colman's Epistolary World, 1688-1755: Networking in the Dissenting Atlantic T2 - Christianities in the Trans-Atlantic World, SN - 9783030966706 U1 - 973 23 PY - 2022/// CY - Cham PB - Springer International Publishing, Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan KW - United States-History KW - Great Britain-History KW - Intellectual life-History KW - Religion-History KW - US History KW - History of Britain and Ireland KW - Intellectual History KW - History of Religion N1 - Introduction -- 1. Benjamin Colman Travels to England, 1695-1699 -- 2. Nonconformist Histories and the Creation of a Transatlantic Dissenting Narrative Identity, 1717-1735 -- 3. An Empire of Books: Spreading Libraries in the British Atlantic World -- 4. The 'Ties of Political Friendship' and the Narragansett Property Conflict, 1720-1752 -- 5. The Apogee and Fracturing of the Dissenting Interest in the Age of Revival, 1730-1747 -- 6. Samuel Davies Travels to England, 1753-1755 N2 - This book tells the story of the Rev. Benjamin Colman (1673-1747), one of eighteenth-century America's most influential ministers, and his transatlantic social world of letters. Exploring his epistolary network reveals how imperial culture diffused through the British Atlantic and formed the Dissenting Interest in America, England, and Scotland. Traveling to and living in England between 1695-1699, Colman forged enduring connections with English Dissenters that would animate and define his ministry for nearly a half century. The chapters reassemble Colman's epistolary web to illuminate the Dissenting Interest's broad range of activities through the circulation of Dissenting histories, libraries, missionaries, revival news, and provincial defenses of religious liberty. This book argues that over the course of Colman's life the Dissenting Interest integrated, extended, and ultimately detached, presenting the history of Protestant Dissent as fundamentally a transatlantic story shaped by the provincial edges of the British Empire. William R. Smith is Associate Director of the Helmerich Center for American Research at Gilcrease Museum and Co-Director of the Museum Science and Management graduate program at the University of Tulsa in Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA. Specializing in the history of eighteenth-century North America and Atlantic studies, he has taught courses in American religious history and archival studies at the University of Notre Dame, Oklahoma State University, and the University of Tulsa UR - https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-96670-6 ER -