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About Robert A. Geake

Robert A. Geake is a public historian and the author of fifteen books on Rhode Island and New England history, including From Slaves to Soldiers: The First Rhode Island Regiment in the American Revolution. Other books include A History of the Narragansett Tribe: Keepers of the Bay, Native and New Americans, New England’s Citizen Soldiers: Mariners and Minutemen, Fired A Gun at the Rising of the Sun: The Journal of Noah Robinson of Attleboro in the Revolutionary War, and a work in progress to be titled The Battle Off The Field in the American Revolution. The author and historian has had the privilege of participating in the symposium at Valley Forge entitled African Americans in the Philadelphia Campaign and the Valley Forge Encampment of 1777-1778 sponsored by the Valley Forge National Park Service (NPS) and The Association for the Study of African American Life and History (ASALH). He has also given his presentation “In League with Liberty: The Persistence of Patriots of Color and the Formation of the Black Regiment in the Continental Line” to libraries and historical societies, including the Institute of the American Revolution in Washington, D.C. Most recently he completed an extensive timeline of the formation and service of the First Rhode Island Regiment for the Battle of Rhode Island Association’s website:https://battleofrhodeisland.org/highlights-of-the-timeline-of-the-1st-rhode-island-regiment/ Mr. Geake served two terms as President of The Cocumscussoc Association which maintains Smith’s Castle, an historic house museum in North Kingstown, Rhode Island, and continues as Chair of the Association’s Education Committee. While chair of that committee, adult educational programs began and were expanded to include the seminars “Roger Was Here” in 2019, which brought scholars on Roger Williams together to discuss his life and legacy, and “Anchored in Rhode Island: The Slave Trade and Reckoning with Our Past”, held in 2023. He also serves on the advisory board of the Rhode Island Slave History Medallion project, and was responsible in organizing the effort to place a medallion on the grounds of Smith’s Castle. As a public historian, Mr. Geake is a contributor to the blogs smallstatebighistory.com, rifootprints.com, and most recently, The Cocumscussoc Review on smithscastle.org. His essay on Rhode Island and The American Revolution is among those contributed to EnCompass, online tutorials for the Rhode Island Historical Society and the Rhode Island Department of Education.
Latest Posts | By Robert A. Geake
A Prison Ship in Providence Harbor and Enemy Prisoners of War in Rhode Island During the Revolutionary War
3 years ago

A Prison Ship in Providence Harbor and Enemy Prisoners of War in Rhode Island During the Revolutionary War

In researching my last book entitled Citizen Soldiers, I came upon many references and stories of those American prisoners who suffered terribly in the makeshift jails of urban confinement or …
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Long Buried and Forgotten: Finding Traces of Slavery in Rhode Island
4 years ago

Long Buried and Forgotten: Finding Traces of Slavery in Rhode Island

The opening page of Rhode Island blacksmith “Nailer Tom” Hazard’s diary includes an entry for June 21, 1778, during the American Revolutionary War. At the time, the British occupied Newport. Hazard records …
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“Awoke This Day Destitute of Bread:” The Diary of Noah Robinson, a Massachusetts Militiaman in the American Revolution Serving in Rhode Island
7 years ago

“Awoke This Day Destitute of Bread:” The Diary of Noah Robinson, a Massachusetts Militiaman in the American Revolution Serving in Rhode Island

The War of the American Revolution was in large part a young man’s war.

At the beginnings of the conflict, many well-educated young men who were descendants …
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Caleb Eddy and an African Slave Voyage Gone Awry
7 years ago

Caleb Eddy and an African Slave Voyage Gone Awry

After the French Revolution, while tensions between Great Britain and the new French revolutionary government were growing, the disruption with trade to the West Indies was acute, especially for Rhode …
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“Citizen” James Varnum and His Fight for the Veterans of the Revolutionary War
8 years ago

“Citizen” James Varnum and His Fight for the Veterans of the Revolutionary War

In the glory of victory, within the early histories of the American republic, only a handful of heroes were chosen for public adulation and heroic mention. One of these heroes …
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Early Accounts of Kent County by Travelers Near and from Afar
9 years ago

Early Accounts of Kent County by Travelers Near and from Afar

Early accounts of travel in what would become Kent County attest to the wildness of the areas in the colony away from the water, where the economy was centered. While …
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“So Neare As We May Judge:” Jury Duty in Early Rhode Island
9 years ago

“So Neare As We May Judge:” Jury Duty in Early Rhode Island

The early court system of Providence was established in its first code of law in 1640, with a body of “five desposers” to ”meete upon gennerall ocations” and look after …
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Unfortunate Ends: Gleanings from the Death Notices of Early Rhode Island Newspapers
9 years ago

Unfortunate Ends: Gleanings from the Death Notices of Early Rhode Island Newspapers

Death notices began to appear in America with the first newspapers. A community-wide extension of the early notices on tavern and meeting house doors, these first notices were sparse, containing …
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John Angell: The Last Gortonist
10 years ago

John Angell: The Last Gortonist

While writing of the diversity of religious leanings in the colony of Rhode Island for my recent book on colonial New England (see the advertisement next to this article), I …
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From Saints to Bootleggers: The Struggle for Temperance and Prohibition in Kent County, 1805-1937.  Part II: Prohibition and the Gangster Carl Rettich, 1920-1937
10 years ago

From Saints to Bootleggers: The Struggle for Temperance and Prohibition in Kent County, 1805-1937. Part II: Prohibition and the Gangster Carl Rettich, 1920-1937

In Kent County, after more than a century of temperance supporters promoting laws banning the sale of alcohol, and the sometimes, violent opposition to such efforts, those in the temperance …
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