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Published byDora Allen Modified over 9 years ago
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Port Towns in Colonial America: Using Geography and Economics to Examine American History Steven H. Newton, PhD Department of History, Political Science and Philosophy Delaware State University, Dover DE
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Remember the Triangular Trade? From Africa to the Americas: Slaves From America to Europe: Agricultural Products From Europe to Africa: Manufactured Goods What’s Wrong with this Picture?
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The Problem with Triangles (1) North America was never a focal point of the Atlantic Slave Trade
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The Problem with Triangles (2) Over-simplification of trade patterns eliminates: Reciprocal trade between North America and Europe Intra-Colonial Trade within North America Intra-Colonial Trade between North America and the West Indies Development of Three Tiers of Port Towns within North America that affected economic and political history
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North American Port Towns Primary: Philadelphia, New York, Boston, Charleston, Baltimore Secondary: Newport, Providence, Salem, New Haven, Norwich, New London, Norfolk Tertiary: Alexandria, Fredericksburg, Richmond, Georgetown, Savannah
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Primary Port Towns Size: Primary Entry Port Locus of Redistribution Network (Hinterland) Shipbuilding Industry Headquarters for Large- scale Merchant Houses Insurance Industry Imperial Presence Fluid Population High Levels of Political Activity
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Primary Port Towns Populations 1760 Philadelphia—23,750 New York—18,000 Boston—15,631 Charleston—8,000 Baltimore—6,000 Average Yearly Outbound Shipping Tonnage 1768-1772 Philadelphia—42,790 tons New York—26,278 tons Boston—37,842 tons Charleston—31,075 tons Value of Exports/Imports to West Indies 1769 Philadelphia Exports—178,331 pounds Imports—180,592 Boston Exports—123,394 pounds Imports—155,387 New York Exports—66,325 pounds Imports--97,420
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Secondary Port Towns Population range from 3,000-8,000 Some direct export abroad but primarily handle intra- colonial trade Exception: Smuggling Far Less Diversified Economy Only Minimal Imperial Presence Politics is Overwhelmingly Local
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Tertiary Port Towns These are not really ports, but small towns in the population range of 400-2,000 that handle some incidental local and intra-colonial trade These towns exist primarily in the South, and their development is hindered by the individual shipping arrangements of large planters, which cripples the development of towns
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How Port Towns challenge us to re- interpret Colonial and Revolutionary History Why political activism spread outward from major New England and Mid-Atlantic ports How virtually invisible economic interactions tied the colonies together Why the Southern colonies developed a completely divergent political economy before the Revolution
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Moving from this… To this…
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