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American Colonies (The Penguin History of the United States)

American Colonies (The Penguin History of the United States)

List Price: $16.00
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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Readable, versatile, and useful history of early America
Review: I expected something different from the title, "American Colonies" and from a quick scan of the table of contents. From this, I anticipated the standard, stock account of the settlement of North America. In buying this book, I hoped to find a history written with deep political, economic, and military insights, as one might find in other histories dealing with this time. Having finished the book, I am pleasently surprised that it did not meet my expectations.

"American Colonies" is written more from an anthropological standpoint than from a more traditonal perspective. The result is that "American Colonies" provides a general account of the American colonial ordeal that makes it a good balance to other histories and other viewpoints. It is a useful and versatile book and a good addition to one's bookshelf.

Although his historic and geographic scope is broad - he covers just about every aspect of colonial history of North America (he really glosses over the Vikings), the scale of the research and point of view is limited. Through the bibliography, it appears that Taylor focuses on recent scholarship for his book, citing works predominantly written in the past thirty years. This is not to say of course that "American Colonies" suffers from this narrow approach; it doesn't, of course, but it does explain the somewhat narrow focus at times in the author's ability to address other topics in depth.

Therefore, I wouldn't make this book your seminal work if you had to name a single book to read on the subject. It is most effective if it is taken into account with other works on the period, the book's mostly enthnocentric, cultural/societal, antrhopological perspectives provide a nice complement to other histories, giving a more complete treatment of a complex era - the tail end of the age of exploration and beginning of the the colonial period - in world history.

With comments about the limited depth of the book's focus already stated, "American Colonies" does provide a good overview and breakdown of the historical elements and issues that, in part, shaped the future of the continent. What is particularly nice about Taylor's book is that he takes seemingly disparite events in North American history - the conquest of New Mexico, the settlement of the eastern seaboard, and the travails of the French along the St. Lawrence, for example - and puts them in one book. The chapters, as others have mentioned in their reviews, are relatively short and the writing style is definitely readable.

Despite its utility and versatile, "American Colonies" is not without flaws. Although the author is an acknowledged and lauded expert on the period, the bibliography is weak and not authoritative, thereby limiting its value. The maps are a little wanting; they have little detail and are of little help.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An absolute must read.
Review: I first noticed the Native American void in history books just a few years ago. I was trying to find which tribes lived near Frederick Co. Maryland, and the information simply wasn't there. I am a hired researcher, so when I say the information wasn't there, I mean that it would take the average person about a year to track down anything at all on the topic. There is a real void in the history of the Americas and there are very few books that treat pre-colonial, non-European American history with any sense of depth or fairness.

This book truly gives you a full-scale idea of what shaped the Americas into what they are today. Finally you can read about what was happening with the native population during the time of contact and conquest. Finally you can get an idea about the environmental and economical impacts of colonialization, both in the Americas and in Europe.

This book is truly a history of "actions" and not "thoughts". Often what we learn in American schools today is what the Puritans were thinking about doing, or what our founding fathers wanted to create out of the Americas. Instead, we learn about the actions they actually took. Which colonies took up the practice of slavery, and why? How succesful where the Puritans in being pure? What was Colombus really thinking?

While the book feels slanted to the leftist mentality, I think you'll find the author treats all groups fairly, focused on their actions and not their intentions. The few books I've read that tried to cover a more holistic history of the Americas usually go too far in the opposite direction, painting all colonists as depraved ravagers, and all natives as white-washed saints. Instead, this book portrays both peoples in their full depth, portraying a complicated, terrible and all too human history.

While I mostly address the native vs. European issue in this review, there is much more going on here. Impacts of trade, morality, religion, government all play out. This is the book we all should have read in our Intro to American History class.

To finish up, this is one of those rare books that I think everyone should read. We will never understand how we can do better unless we learn what we have done wrong. I was truly floored at how much new information was here. Why is it so difficult to find books that cover the full scope of U.S. history? How can we understand what's going on in our country, if we don't understand how it even came to exist?

This book is easy to read, well-written, and amazingly well-researched. If you want a real idea about what shaped the Americas into what they are today, this is what you should be reading. (10 out of 10)

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great Book If You Want The Colonial History Jet Tour
Review: If you're interested in a brief overview of American colonial history, you will arguably not find a better book than Alan Taylor's American Colonies. This work will give you a succinct history, and it provides just the right amount of explanations when needed for the reader who is unfamiliar with the topic to be able to understand the events as they unfold. Overall, it is a great introduction to the topic. It is also excellent as a refresher for the serious student of history or history buff. Taylor did a masterful job of taking such a big story and whittling it down to its essentials in just a little under 500 pages. This book is well written, and it flows in a manner that will keep you interested as the story of American colonization unfolds. My only gripe with this work is that Taylor occasionally leans a bit too heavily toward the interpretation that the Christianized Europeans were the "bad guy" invaders and that they really did an evil thing to the Indian population by trying to subvert Indian culture with European ideology and religion. This is arguably true in many instances; however, Taylor makes no distinction between 15th, 16th, 17th, and 18th century political Christianity and biblical Christianity. We in our 21st century secular world often fail to realize that during the time of colonization there was no separation of religion and state in European nations (just as their isn't any separation today in middle-eastern countries for example). As the student of western history knows, religious affiliation went hand in hand with the politics of the day. As a result of Taylor's interpretations, this work will leave the reader more often than not with a negative view of the European colonizers. However, if it wasn't for them, we wouldn't be living in the greatest nation in the world.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great Book If You Want The Colonial History Jet Tour
Review: If you're interested in a brief overview of American colonial history, you will arguably not find a better book than Alan Taylor's American Colonies. This work will give you a succinct history, and it provides just the right amount of explanations when needed for the reader who is unfamiliar with the topic to be able to understand the events as they unfold. Overall, it is a great introduction to the topic. It is also excellent as a refresher for the serious student of history or history buff. Taylor did a masterful job of taking such a big story and whittling it down to its essentials in just a little under 500 pages. This book is well written, and it flows in a manner that will keep you interested as the story of American colonization unfolds. My only gripe with this work is that Taylor occasionally leans a bit too heavily toward the interpretation that the Christianized Europeans were the "bad guy" invaders and that they really did an evil thing to the Indian population by trying to subvert Indian culture with European ideology and religion. This is arguably true in many instances; however, Taylor makes no distinction between 15th, 16th, 17th, and 18th century political Christianity and biblical Christianity. We in our 21st century secular world often fail to realize that during the time of colonization there was no separation of religion and state in European nations (just as their isn't any separation today in middle-eastern countries for example). As the student of western history knows, religious affiliation went hand in hand with the politics of the day. As a result of Taylor's interpretations, this work will leave the reader more often than not with a negative view of the European colonizers. However, if it wasn't for them, we wouldn't be living in the greatest nation in the world.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A Highly Informative and Accessible History
Review: In "American Colonies," historian Alan Taylor has created an easily accessible yet highly informative overview of the crucial first era of the history of North America. Taylor does an admirable job of elaborating on the simple framework of names and dates that bore so many contemporary students; he discusses geography, agriculture, trade, as well as the cultures and religions of the myriad groups (both native and European) that created colonial America.

Rather than attempting to cover the entire continent in a continuous chronology, Taylor breaks the book into 19 chapters, each describing one geographic area during a given time period (e.g. "Virginia 1570-1650," "New England 1600-1700"). I found this organizational choice to be very effective; it makes the scope of the topic manageable and also allows one to easily research a specific area. The chapter setup is all the better due to the content choices Taylor has made. Rather than focus solely on the 13 British colonies, the book also spends time on the Spanish and French settlements. I fear that many people think Columbus discovered North America in 1492 and then nothing happened until the Pilgrims landed in 1620. Taylor corrects that misperception by including two chapters on the Spanish settlements in Mexico, New Mexico, and Florida before even touching on the British colonies. There are also two chapters on New France and Canada that give greater meaning to the Seven Years War. I was most pleased, however, with the chapter discussing the British West Indies, a geographic area completely ignored by many US History courses. Yet as Taylor explains, the West Indies at that time were FAR more valuable to the Crown than the mainland colonies! These chapters are a much needed corrective, but they are not given disproportionate coverage: a large majority of the book focuses on what was to become the continental United States.

The story of the early United States is largely a story of European-Indian interactions, another topic Taylor handles well. Rather than taking Native Americans for granted, he spends the first chapter explaining their origins, the migrations across the Bering Strait, and their lives before European contact. But the eventual clash of cultures is the dominant story and Taylor states the case bluntly: beginning with the Taino on Hispaniola (p. 38-39), Europeans conquered, murdered, and enslaved native peoples on an unthinkable scale. But Taylor lets the evidence speak for itself and does not lecture the reader or take the opportunity to moralize. Furthermore, he dispels several myths about Indians that seem to be creeping into popular belief. Indians were not inherently peaceful peoples: the Five Nation Iroquois had gruesome rituals of torture ("The seventeenth century was a merciless time for the defeated on either side of the Atlantic" [p. 103]) and raided the Huron to near extinction. Nor were they pre-modern environmentalists: "Natives usually showed restraint, not because they were ecologically minded in the twentieth century sense, but because spirits, who could harm people, lurked in the animals and plants" (p. 19). All in all, I thought the book presented a very balanced and detailed account of the Native Americans.

Although I read this book on my own time, I could not help but appreciate what a great book it would be for students, either high school or college. (It is the first volume of The Penguin History of the United States, edited by Eric Foner.) First, Taylor does not assume a great deal of prior knowledge and goes out of his way to clearly explain concepts that other books might not. For example, Taylor explains the English Parliament in a way that would be very helpful to those not familiar with British history while not boring those of us who know more (p. 120). The Glorious Revolution (p. 278) and the advent of Quakers (p. 264) are both handled in a similarly informative way. The book also includes the relevant maps for each chapter, a great boon to students familiarizing themselves with geography. Finally, the book is based almost exclusively on secondary sources. This point concerned me at first, but I came to love the fact that for any topic I could look in the extensive bibliography and find an entire book on that particular subject.

Given this praise, why only four stars? Basically, I'm stingy with the five star reviews. While I found this book extremely informative and easy to read, it was never thrilling. This lack of excitement is no fault of the author, the topic is just too broad to be gripping: colonial America covers too much time, too much space, and too many figures (none of whom can be adequately fleshed out in such a broad survey). Ultimately I found "American Colonies" to be a consistently good book (perhaps the best on the subject as a whole) but not an excellent book. I do, however, very much look forward to reading Professor Taylor's other book, "William Cooper's Town," for which he won the Pulitzer Prize.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A Highly Informative and Accessible History
Review: In "American Colonies," historian Alan Taylor has created an easily accessible yet highly informative overview of the crucial first era of the history of North America. Taylor does an admirable job of elaborating on the simple framework of names and dates that bore so many contemporary students; he discusses geography, agriculture, trade, as well as the cultures and religions of the myriad groups (both native and European) that created colonial America.

Rather than attempting to cover the entire continent in a continuous chronology, Taylor breaks the book into 19 chapters, each describing one geographic area during a given time period (e.g. "Virginia 1570-1650," "New England 1600-1700"). I found this organizational choice to be very effective; it makes the scope of the topic manageable and also allows one to easily research a specific area. The chapter setup is all the better due to the content choices Taylor has made. Rather than focus solely on the 13 British colonies, the book also spends time on the Spanish and French settlements. I fear that many people think Columbus discovered North America in 1492 and then nothing happened until the Pilgrims landed in 1620. Taylor corrects that misperception by including two chapters on the Spanish settlements in Mexico, New Mexico, and Florida before even touching on the British colonies. There are also two chapters on New France and Canada that give greater meaning to the Seven Years War. I was most pleased, however, with the chapter discussing the British West Indies, a geographic area completely ignored by many US History courses. Yet as Taylor explains, the West Indies at that time were FAR more valuable to the Crown than the mainland colonies! These chapters are a much needed corrective, but they are not given disproportionate coverage: a large majority of the book focuses on what was to become the continental United States.

The story of the early United States is largely a story of European-Indian interactions, another topic Taylor handles well. Rather than taking Native Americans for granted, he spends the first chapter explaining their origins, the migrations across the Bering Strait, and their lives before European contact. But the eventual clash of cultures is the dominant story and Taylor states the case bluntly: beginning with the Taino on Hispaniola (p. 38-39), Europeans conquered, murdered, and enslaved native peoples on an unthinkable scale. But Taylor lets the evidence speak for itself and does not lecture the reader or take the opportunity to moralize. Furthermore, he dispels several myths about Indians that seem to be creeping into popular belief. Indians were not inherently peaceful peoples: the Five Nation Iroquois had gruesome rituals of torture ("The seventeenth century was a merciless time for the defeated on either side of the Atlantic" [p. 103]) and raided the Huron to near extinction. Nor were they pre-modern environmentalists: "Natives usually showed restraint, not because they were ecologically minded in the twentieth century sense, but because spirits, who could harm people, lurked in the animals and plants" (p. 19). All in all, I thought the book presented a very balanced and detailed account of the Native Americans.

Although I read this book on my own time, I could not help but appreciate what a great book it would be for students, either high school or college. (It is the first volume of The Penguin History of the United States, edited by Eric Foner.) First, Taylor does not assume a great deal of prior knowledge and goes out of his way to clearly explain concepts that other books might not. For example, Taylor explains the English Parliament in a way that would be very helpful to those not familiar with British history while not boring those of us who know more (p. 120). The Glorious Revolution (p. 278) and the advent of Quakers (p. 264) are both handled in a similarly informative way. The book also includes the relevant maps for each chapter, a great boon to students familiarizing themselves with geography. Finally, the book is based almost exclusively on secondary sources. This point concerned me at first, but I came to love the fact that for any topic I could look in the extensive bibliography and find an entire book on that particular subject.

Given this praise, why only four stars? Basically, I'm stingy with the five star reviews. While I found this book extremely informative and easy to read, it was never thrilling. This lack of excitement is no fault of the author, the topic is just too broad to be gripping: colonial America covers too much time, too much space, and too many figures (none of whom can be adequately fleshed out in such a broad survey). Ultimately I found "American Colonies" to be a consistently good book (perhaps the best on the subject as a whole) but not an excellent book. I do, however, very much look forward to reading Professor Taylor's other book, "William Cooper's Town," for which he won the Pulitzer Prize.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Multi-faceted colonial history
Review: Many American history books fall into one or more of three traps: Beginning American history with Columbus in 1492, acting as if the United States was destined for independence from the beginning and limiting colonial history to English influences on the Eastern Seaboard.

This book does not fall into any of these traps. Author Alan Taylor specifically set out to avoid them.

The book begins with the first Americans' migration from Siberia into Alaska and ends with U.S. control of the Hawaiian Islands in 1898. Taylor also includes the Caribbean islands in his colonial history. As he points out, for much of the period before U.S. independence, the West Indies were more important to the British Crown than the mainland colonies. And settlement of the islands affected settlement on the mainland. They traded with each other and the mainland was a safety valve for the crowded islands.

Ironically, the future land of the free was populated by many slaves. The conquering powers -- British, French, Spanish, Dutch, Swedish -- enslaved and killed the native population in one of the greatest genocides in history. Since the Native Americans died too quickly to get much forced labor from them, indentured servants came over from Europe. If they made it through five years -- rather unlikely -- they would be free. Soon, desperation for labor brought African slaves.

Taylor explains the push-pull nature of much of this migration. Some came because they were dragged in chains and some came because they were starving in their old homes. The dangers of the Americas gave rise to a different class system in the New World. Color mattered more than class. The whites were forced to band together against real and perceived fears of non-whites. They also played Native American and blacks against each other. Europeans also made Native American alliances to gain advantage over their rivals.

The continued clearing and claiming of the land by Euro-Americans dispersed Native Americans. Tribes reformed and new trade patterns sprang up. Some of the most useful portions of the book explain the impact on the lives of the Plains Indians, who were not generally in direct contact with the seaboard colonies. The book is also discusses colonies in the American Southwest and the Russian colonial effort, which are too often ignored by historians.

In most respects, the book is a worthy read. If not for some flaws, I would have given it another star. It suffers from lack of footnotes/endnotes. The book ends abruptly with Hawaiian King Kamehameha's death in 1819, then references American dominance of the islands in 1898. Some bridge needs to be made here. While reasonably well-written, the writing lacks sparkle and is rather pedestrian.

That said, "American Colonies" is a well-rounded introduction to colonial history and would be a good American history textbook.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Gibbon was Right
Review: More than any other history book I have read this book confirms Edward Gibbon's dictum that history is "little more than the register of crimes, follies, ad misfortunes of mankind. It is a history of the Americas starting with pre-Columbian times and continuing until about the time of the American Revolution. While I am hardly an expert, the author is very familiar with the literature on his topic. His opinions seem well reasoned to me and are consistent with what I do know independent of this book.

The overwhelming impression of this book is just how nasty brutish and short life was in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries in both Europe and the Americans. How badly the Native Americans were treated is common knowledge. But the desperation behind the greed and cruelty of the Europeans is less well known. Most of the people who came to the "new world" were driven by poverty to risk all with the odds against them. It is hard to believe that anything as wonderful as the United States could have had such terrible beginnings.

The worst thing the Europeans did was done accidentally. Europeans brought diseases with them and infected the Native Americans. The author cites new research and studies by anthropologists that suggest that in the century after Columbus the native population of about 50 million shrank by 90%. This is more than anything else what made the cruel conquest possible. And the author says that the English learned how to treat the Indians by their conquest of Ireland. Until the Nazis unleashed the holocaust, history may have known horrors equal to the conquest of Ireland, but nothing worse.

The Europeans were little better to each other. In an early settlement on the Chesapeake one man who stole some oats had a rod thrust through his tongue and then he was chained to a tree to die from starvation. This shows how close to the edge of starvation the colony must have been to resort to such drastic actions.

Most people who emigrated from England were bound to four years service before they got their freedom. Not many lived long enough to gain it. Fewer still became rich. But there were more impoverished laborers in England to replace them. And there were the horrors of slavery-mostly black African, since Indians died too quickly.

The only decent story is that of William Penn and the Quakers. Under his guidance they dealt fairly with the Indians near them and paid a fair price for their land, of which they had plenty to sell due to smallpox. In Barbados one Quaker was killed and the rest expelled for having the temerity to teach black African slaves the Christian gospel-and this at a time when almost everyone believed Christian faith was the only escape from eternal damnation. But the plantation owners did not want to have to deal with Christian slaves-they might feel they had to treat them better. French Jesuits and Spanish Franciscans also tried to convert the Indians, but with little success.

If you want to know the early history of the Americas this book is the place to start. But the story has few bright parts. It is story of greed and death. Try to have compassion for the invaders. Their plight was little better than that of the conquered.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: An excellent start to what promises to be a major new series
Review: On first glance it might appear odd that Alan Taylor should be one of our leading historians of the revolutionary era. Taylor's two previous works were about the Maine frontier and the life of James Fenimore Cooper's father. What, ask the skeptical, of interest has ever happened in Maine? And Cooper is easily the writer that even conservatives would most like to chuck out of the canon and replace with the Simpsons. But the readers of those two books were richly rewarded as Taylor produced complex, well documented narratives about the ironies and limitations of early American democracy. Taylor's new book deals with the colonial era, the first volume of a the Penguin history of the United States, edited by Eric Foner. In one respect Taylor's work is superior to any previous volume. His work does not deal solely with the 13 American colonies. Instead it deals with all the colonial powers and the aboriginal societies on what is now the current day United States. As well as the English and the Spanish, we also get the Dutch, the French and the Russians. Taylor covers Florida to New Mexico, and California to Oregon. Taylor discusses both Hawaii and Alaska, and because both had a major effect on the thirteen colonies, Quebec and the West Indies. Only Puerto Rico is excluded from Taylor's wide canvas. One can only wonder whether future volumes will go into as much detail about the aboriginal population, the consequences of the Mexican war of independence, and the squalid farce of the "Hawaiian Republic."

Early on Taylor reminds us of the essential truth of the colonial era. Colonial America was not a virgin land, but a widowed land, not a land of freedom, but one of chains. Until 1776 two-thirds of the people who came to this hemisphere did so in chains. (After 1776 the ratio sharply changed to the benefit of freedom.) Untold tens of millions of the aboriginal inhabitants died after 1492, mostly from disease, but also from the vicious behavior from European colonists. Taylor is very good here, as he points out that this European cruelty was in the beginning at least, not so much "racist" as "Christian," in origin. At the same time we can see its precedents in the Spanish conquest of the Azores and Canary Islands, the English conquest of Ireland, and Russian atrocities against Native Siberians. Taylor is very good on Indian (his term) society, and how they ranged from nomadic hunter gatherers to complex urban empires. He is also excellent on ecology, whether it is Indian land practises or why the population of the Western hemisphere was vulnerable to epidemic diseases. He notes that it is anachronistic to view them as environmentalists. But he also notes that whether in New England or California their activities produced complex and fertile ecosystems where the Europeans just saw anarchic wilderness, and which they promptly changed for the worse. At the same time he points out how many "tribes" encountered in later centuries where the combined remnants of many tribes shattered by plague and genocide, how Indians could use European markets and firearms to their own advantage while ultimately becoming dependant on them, and how horses increased the power of some tribes, while increasing tribal inequality and damaging their environment.

There is another irony to the American success story, which Taylor also brings out. The rise of the yeoman republic, the key to early American democracy, was a historical accident. Most male immigrants from England were not very religious and most of them went to Virginia and the West Indies. Most British attention was concentrated on the cash crop colonies. But the small minority who went to relatively poor New England were able to earlier achieve a proper gender balance and then quickly start reproducing at a level unprecedented in Europe. The same thing happened in quasi-feudal Quebec, but at a lower level and ultimately too late to defeat British power. Another irony is that one reason why so many English and Scots went to find prosperity in America was because British capitalism was much more successful in depriving farmers of their property than feudal France.

Taylor has provided a superb synthesis of the existing literature. Given the chronological and geographic scope of his subject, Taylor's work does not have the compelling thesis one finds in such histories as Gordon Craig on Germany, Christopher Hill on Britain or Denis Mack Smith on Italy. Indeed the last chapter, on the Pacific, is somewhat anti-climactic. Taylor is not the most compelling of writers, though there is some black humor when he quotes the rationalizations of Milford, Connecticut in its demands for more Indian land: "Voted that the earth is the Lord's and the fulness thereof; voted, that the earth is given to the Saints; voted we are the Saints." And those who don't like Cotton Mather will be grimly unsuprised to learn that this callous Divine wrenched off the jawbone of Metacom (the King Philip of King Philip's war) when the latter's skull lay on display, and then went on to debate whether Metacom's 9 year old son should be executed. (They sold him into slavery instead.) Only six and a half pages are devoted to setting the stage for the American revolution, so we do not get as much on the roots of American democracy as one might like. And his discussion of the Great Awakening does not fully confront Jon Butler's coldly unsentimental critique of it. Taylor does make one factual error: Spinoza did not emigrate to the Netherlands as a response to its wonderful tolerance; he was born there and would in fact encounter the limits of Dutch liberty. But otherwise this is a wonderful textbook that sets the standard for contemporary scholarship.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Good review of things I forgot (or maybe never knew)
Review: Taylor provides an extensive - 526 pages including bibliography and index - overview of European colonial initiatives in the Atlantic, North America and parts of the Caribbean from the early 1400s - when Portuguese and Spanish proto-colonists got their feet wet, so to speak, by colonizing the Azores, Canaries and Medeiras - through Spanish and Russian efforts on the West Coast in the early 1800s. Substantial space is given to colonial efforts of the French, Dutch, and Spanish as well as English settlement in the eastern Caribbean and the east coast of what eventually became the United States.

A tragic theme throughout the book is the encounter between Europeans and Native Americans that decimated the latter, primarily through inadvertent introduction of diseases but also through warfare, slavery, appropriation of their land and destruction of the environment on which the Indians relied. Taylor also describes how the Indians repeatedly collaborated with or benefited from European traders and colonists when they perceived - often erroneously - that the Europeans' actions benefited their own economic and strategic interests. And, yes, the Indians traded in slaves - either other Indians or Africans - as well. The role and some of the impact of enslaved Africans on Colonial development is also described throughout the book.

Regarding the English colonies that became the original thirteen United States it's helpful for Taylor to remind that most of the colonies had unique beginnings that influenced their cultures and economies and politics for many years after the American revolution. For example, South Carolina essentially began as a colony of the fabulously wealthy colony of Barbados, and initiated use of enslaved Africans on a scale that dwarfed the Chesapeake tobacco plantations. And Pennsylvania started relatively late but grew quickly and prosperously as the initial English Quakers were quickly outnumbered by industrious German family farmers as opposed to indentures servants or slaves.

I recommend this book to anyone with an interest in Euro-American settlement, the formative history of the United States and the interaction of Europeans with Native Americans.







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