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Mr. Jefferson's lost cause : land, farmers, slavery, and the Louisiana Purchase /

Thomas Jefferson advocated a republic of small farmers--free and independent yeomen. And yet as president he presided over a massive expansion of the slaveholding plantation system--particularly with the Louisiana Purchase--squeezing the yeomanry to the fringes and to less desirable farmland. Now Ro...

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Основен автор: Kennedy, Roger G.
Формат: Електронна книга
Език: English
Публикувано: New York : Oxford University Press, 2003.
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Онлайн достъп: http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=264855
Подобни документи: Print version:: Mr. Jefferson's lost cause.
Съдържание:
  • The land and Mr. Jefferson. Chapter 1. Choices and consequences
  • Rain in Virginia and its results
  • Lessons for yeomen
  • Pasteur, Wilson, and the three sisters
  • Yeomen, planters, and the land
  • Cheap land and slave labor
  • Chapter 2. Washington, Jefferson, three worthies, and plantation migrancy
  • Philosophers in the parlor and lessons on the land
  • Westward sweeps the course of desolation
  • The gospel of Garland Harmon
  • Chapter 3. The way not taken
  • The makers of a new order
  • Jefferson's epitaph
  • Disestablishing the grandees
  • The brotherhood
  • The unpropitiated son
  • Monticello again
  • Jefferson and democracy
  • Jefferson and the family farmer
  • Chapter 4. Independence
  • A dependent arcadia
  • The virtues of diversification
  • Commercial squires and ungovernable governors
  • Diversification, the pursuit of happiness, and cities
  • Eastward toward civility
  • The thousand-foot line
  • Chapter 5. Powers of the earth
  • Land companies, trading companies, and triassic capitalism
  • The great land companies and revolution
  • Jefferson and western speculation
  • Veterans' benefits
  • Armed occupation
  • Armed occupation marches on
  • Chapter 6. Jefferson's opportunities and the land
  • 1784 : the second opportunity : the trans-Appalachian west
  • The third opportunity : the lower Mississippi Valley
  • Old men's dreams and the memories of the land
  • The invisible empire and the land. Chapter 7. Colonial-imperialism
  • Colonies and empires
  • From round table to board table
  • Reinvesting the loot
  • Landed gentry
  • Chapter 8. Textile colonial-imperialism
  • India is conquered by the mechanics
  • Solving the problem of supply
  • The Americans are put on notice
  • Hamilton, Jefferson, and Tench Coxe respond to William Pitt
  • Jefferson and the cotton business
  • Slaves as cash crop
  • The millers send out their salesmen
  • Independence?
  • The British and the plantocracy.
  • Resistance to the plantation system. Chapter 9. McGillivray
  • Mixed people and mixed motives
  • Indian statehood
  • McGillivray's nationality
  • McGillivray and Washington
  • Chapter 10. Resisters, assisters, and lost causes
  • Scots, Blacks, and Seminoles
  • The firm
  • The valences shift
  • William Augustus Bowles : the second act
  • Bowles and Ellicott
  • "Execute him on the spot"
  • The fox is run to earth
  • Chapter 11. The firm steps forward
  • Deerskins, rum, and land
  • Indian yeomen and Governor Sargent's lost cause
  • Yankee yeomen
  • Chapter 12. Jeffersonian strategy and Jeffersonian agents
  • Jefferson and Wilkinson
  • Wilkinson's clients
  • The firm adapts and collects
  • Wilkinson, Forbes, and Dearborn
  • Debt for land
  • The accounts of Silas Dinsmoor
  • The firm wraps things up
  • Andrew Jackson takes charge, with some help from Benjamin Hawkins
  • Agents of the master organism : assistants to the plantation system. Chapter 13. Fulwar Skipwith in context
  • Skipwith the Jeffersonian
  • Toussaint's yeoman republic
  • The career of Fulwar Skipwith
  • The quasi war and spoliation
  • James Monroe's first mission to France
  • Skipwith, the Livingstons, and Louisiana cotton
  • The chancellor, indolent maroons, and Thomas Sumter
  • Mister Sumter is shocked
  • The third article
  • Skipwith and the Floridas
  • Consul Skipwith goes to jail
  • Chapter 14. Destiny by intention
  • The adventures of George Mathews
  • War, commerce, and race
  • Assisters and resisters
  • The green flag of Florida
  • Chapter 15. Louisiana and another class of Virginians
  • The third opportunity reconsidered
  • The Hillhouse debates
  • Chapter 16. The Virginians of Louisiana decide the future of the land
  • Out of the hills
  • The Kemper outrage
  • 1809-1810
  • Skipwith and Randolph
  • Complexities in Baton Rouge
  • Skipwith at bay
  • Haiti again
  • Skipwith's Florida
  • Epilogue. The Jeffersonian legacy : The Civil War and the Homestead Act
  • Statesmanship and self-deception
  • Final thoughts
  • The economics of land use
  • Appendix. Another stream
  • Jefferson, Madison, Adam Smith, and the Chesapeake cities
  • The Romans, armed occupation, and the Homestead Act
  • Jefferson and the Ordinances of 1784 and 1787-89
  • Debt and land
  • Jefferson's Doctrine of usufruct
  • Tribes, land, and Ireland
  • Creeks, Seminoles, and numbers
  • The Livingstons and West Florida
  • The Claiborne-Clark duel
  • Fulwar Skipwith and Andrew Jackson.