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Securing the West - Politics, Public Lands, and the Fate of the Old Republic, 1785-1850 (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,374
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Securing the West - Politics, Public Lands, and the Fate of the Old Republic, 1785-1850 (Hardcover)
Series: Reconfiguring American Political History
Expected to ship within 12 - 19 working days
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Few issues defined the period between American independence and the
Mexican War more sharply than westward settlement and the role of
the federal government in that expansion. In Securing the West,
John R. Van Atta examines the visions of the founding generation
and the increasing influence of ideological differences in the
years after the peace of 1815. Americans expected the country to
grow westward, but on the details of that growth they held strongly
different opinions. What part should Congress play in this
development? How much should public land cost? What of the families
and businesses left behind, and how would society's institutions be
established in the West? What of the premature settlers, the
"squatters" who challenged the rule of law while epitomizing
democratic daring? Taking a broad approach, Van Atta addresses
three interrelated queries: First, how did competing economic
beliefs and divergent cultural mandates influence the various
outcomes of this broad debate over the means, timing, and purposes
of settling the trans-Appalachian West? Second, what alternative
visions of western society lay behind the battles among policy
makers within the government and the interested parties who would
sway them? Third, why did settlement of the West take such a
different course in the end from that which the earliest leaders of
the republic intended? This story explores dimensions of the
federal lands question that other historians have minimized or left
out entirely. Van Atta draws upon a range of sources known to have
influenced the public discourse, including congressional debates,
committee reports, and correspondence; editorial writings by the
famous and unknown; and news coverage in various widely circulated
newspapers and magazines of the period. Much of the attention
focuses on Congress-the elected leaders who advocated divergent
plans about western lands. In Congress, more than any other place,
public leaders articulated basic concerns about the character,
structure, direction, and destiny of society in the early United
States. By 1830, many other important national concerns had become
critically entangled with land disposition, creating points of
ideological tension among rival regions, parties, and interests in
the early years of the republic - particularly in Jacksonian
America.
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