What makes power legitimate?
For more than two centuries, Americans have debated freedom, equality, justice, and democracy. But beneath each of those ideals lies a deeper question: What gives any government the right to govern?
The Chronicle: A Search for Legitimacy tells the story of the United States through the eyes of ordinary men and women who lived during its defining moments. A printer's apprentice helps print the Declaration of Independence. A clerk witnesses the creation of the Presidency. A frontier schoolteacher, a country pastor, a factory schoolmaster, a corporate records clerk, a civil rights attorney, and others each inherit a journal-the Chronicle-and add their own reflections as the nation confronts new challenges across 250 years.
Guided by a mysterious Stage Manager, readers discover that history is more than a sequence of events. It is a continuing conversation about the legitimacy of power. Each generation inherits the promises proclaimed in 1776 and must decide whether it will preserve, strengthen, or renew them for the challenges of its own time.
Blending historical fiction with political philosophy, this book traces the enduring search for legitimate self-government from the founding of the American republic to the threshold of its 250th anniversary. Rather than celebrating history uncritically or judging it from afar, The Chronicle invites readers to walk alongside those who lived it, asking the same timeless question they faced:
Can a people govern themselves-and remain faithful to the principles that first gave their government legitimacy?