Speculation nation: land mania in the revolutionary American republic

Book Cover
Average Rating
Publisher
University of Pennsylvania Press
Publication Date
[2023]
Language
English

Description

During the first quarter-century after its founding, the United States was swept by a wave of land speculation so unprecedented in intensity and scale that contemporaries and historians alike have dubbed it a “mania.” In Speculation Nation, Michael A. Blaakman uncovers the revolutionary origins of this real-estate bonanza—a story of ambition, corruption, capitalism, and statecraft that stretched across millions of acres from Maine to the Mississippi and Georgia to the Great Lakes.Patriot leaders staked the success of their revolution on the seizure and public sale of Native American territory. Initially, they hoped that fledgling state and national governments could pay the hefty costs of the War for Independence and extend a republican society of propertied citizens by selling expropriated land directly to white farmers. But those democratic plans quickly ran aground of a series of obstacles, including an economic depression and the ability of many Native nations to repel U.S. invasion. Wily merchants, lawyers, planters, and financiers rushed into the breach. Scrambling to profit off future expansion, they lobbied governments to convey massive tracts for pennies an acre, hounded revolutionary veterans to sell their land bounties for a pittance, and marketed the rustic ideal of a yeoman’s republic—the early American dream—while waiting for land values to rise.When the land business crashed in the late 1790s, scores of “land mad” speculators found themselves imprisoned for debt or declaring bankruptcy. But through their visionary schemes and corrupt machinations, U.S. speculators and statesmen had spawned a distinctive and enduring form of settler colonialism: a financialized frontier, which transformed vast swaths of contested land into abstract commodities. Speculation Nation reveals how the era of land mania made Native dispossession a founding premise of the American republic and ultimately rooted the United States’ “empire of liberty” in speculative capitalism.

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ISBN
9781512824483

Table of Contents

From the Book

Introduction
Part I: the rapturous idea of property
Certain unalienable land rights
What the West could fund
Part II: Mania's moment
The logic of land mania
Paper promise
This dirty business
Preemptive property
Federal dealing
Part III: the land speculation
Great discredit
Epilogue
List of abbreviations
Notes
Index
Acknowledgments.

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Published Reviews

Publisher's Weekly Review

Princeton historian Blaakman debuts with an informative analysis of "the tremendous wave of land speculation that crashed outward from the new United States between the end of British rule and the beginning of the nineteenth century." In the Royal Proclamation of 1763, issued by George III of Great Britain at the end of the Seven Years' War regarding newly won French territory, Americans colonists had been denied access to all land west of the Appalachian mountains; the region was declared an "Indian Reserve." To British Americans, this "was anathema," and it became a central cause of the American Revolution and precipitated the land speculation "mania" of the early national period, which became entwined with the revolution itself. As Blaakman puts it, "Americans staked the success of their revolution on the seizure and sale of land." He spotlights George Washington and Benjamin Franklin, both speculators, demonstrating how they "lived, thought, sold, and bought within the ideological matrix of Enlightenment-era political arithmetic," as well as other Founding Fathers, including Robert Morris, a "leading land tycoon" whose failed speculations put him in debtors' prison. Detailed and persuasive, Blaakman's account offers useful context for later 19th-century events, including Thomas Jefferson's Louisiana Purchase of 1803 and Andrew Jackson's policy of "Indian Removal." It's an illuminating survey of an important and understudied aspect of the Revolutionary era. (Sept.)

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Publishers Weekly Reviews

Princeton historian Blaakman debuts with an informative analysis of "the tremendous wave of land speculation that crashed outward from the new United States between the end of British rule and the beginning of the nineteenth century." In the Royal Proclamation of 1763, issued by George III of Great Britain at the end of the Seven Years' War regarding newly won French territory, Americans colonists had been denied access to all land west of the Appalachian mountains; the region was declared an "Indian Reserve." To British Americans, this "was anathema," and it became a central cause of the American Revolution and precipitated the land speculation "mania" of the early national period, which became entwined with the revolution itself. As Blaakman puts it, "Americans staked the success of their revolution on the seizure and sale of land." He spotlights George Washington and Benjamin Franklin, both speculators, demonstrating how they "lived, thought, sold, and bought within the ideological matrix of Enlightenment-era political arithmetic," as well as other Founding Fathers, including Robert Morris, a "leading land tycoon" whose failed speculations put him in debtors' prison. Detailed and persuasive, Blaakman's account offers useful context for later 19th-century events, including Thomas Jefferson's Louisiana Purchase of 1803 and Andrew Jackson's policy of "Indian Removal." It's an illuminating survey of an important and understudied aspect of the Revolutionary era. (Sept.)

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