Abstract
For more than four decades, Nelson has produced some of the most original and creative work on American constitutional and legal history. His prize-winning books have blazed new trails for historians with their substantive arguments and the scope and depth of Nelson's exploration of primary sources. Nelson was the first legal scholar to use early American county court records as sources of legal and social history, and his work (on legal history in England, colonial America, and New York) has been a model for generations of legal historians. This book includes a number of chapters exemplifying and explaining the process of identifying and interpreting archival sources—the foundation of an array of methods of writing American legal history. The chapaters presented here span the full range of American history from the colonial era to the 1980s. Each chapter has either identified a body of sources not previously explored or devised a new method of interrogating sources already known.
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