@book{223, keywords = {Native Americans, George Washington (1732-99), pioneers, Daniel Boone (1734-1820), German Americans, Scots-Irish Americans, attorneys, Presbyterians, soldiers, immigrants, American Revolutionary War, Irish Americans, Tories, Edward Hand (1744-1802), Samuel Semple (c. 1731-95), Archibald Lochry (1733-81), Scottish Americans}, author = {Agnes Sligh Turnbull}, title = {The Day Must Dawn}, abstract = {A pioneer romance about pains suffered by Scotch-Irish women in frontier settlements who offered up their men to the war. “The story of the Murrays and their neighbors,” says Kirkus Reviews, “of Violet the daughter, who suddenly realized that she was in love with her foster brother, Hugh, and of how Hugh felt he must play a man's part before he declared his love for her. Authentic pictures of frontier life, of the crudeness of the houses and the furnishings, of the superstitions, old wives tales, religious quirks, and of the essential faith in liberty and democracy.”}, year = {1942}, pages = {483 p.}, publisher = {The Macmillan Company}, address = {New York}, note = {Settings are referred to by their historical names as follows: Mt. Washington is Coal Hill; Greensburg is Newtown.}, language = {English}, }