Lexington Books
Pages: 244
Trim: 6¾ x 9¼
978-1-4985-8482-1 • Paperback • November 2018 • $50.99 • (£39.00)
Susan Mitchell Sommers is professor of history at St. Vincent College.
Preface
Prologue: In the Aftermath of War
Chapter 1: The Making of a Myth
Chapter 2: Those he Left Behind
Chapter 3: Dunckerley all at Sea
Chapter 4: Dunckerley Ashore
Chapter 5: The Trappings of Royalty
Chapter 6: Making a Mason
Chapter 7: Provincial Grand Master of England
Chapter 8: Appendant Orders and Higher Degrees
Chapter 9: Apotheosis
Epilogue
Sommers has revealed a stunning story of self-deception and re-invention. In a shrewd re-examination of the hagiographic accounts she shows the sleights of hand underlying our understanding of the past, its many twists of fate, and what enthusiastic biographers do with them. A must-read for modern historians and their students.
— James Allen
The intricate historical detective work involved in Sommers's exposure of Dunckerley's invention of his own past is fascinating and compelling.
— David Stevenson, University of St Andrews
Sommers's revelatory and revisionist biography of Thomas Dunckerley offers an entertaining and insightful entrance into the demimonde of royal patronage, institutional instability, and status anxiety which surrounded eighteenth-century English Freemasonry. This work destabilizes stodgy fraternal histories while demonstrating how 'the Craft' assumed its modern shape through the sincere efforts of imperfect men.
— William D. Moore, Boston University