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Land and Liberty - Hudson Valley Riots in the Age of Revolution (Hardcover, New)
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Land and Liberty - Hudson Valley Riots in the Age of Revolution (Hardcover, New)
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Beginning in the 1750s, a series of riots rippled through the
Hudson Valley. Tenants rose in protest against landlords who not
only collectively controlled 2.5 million acres of the best soil but
who also, in many cases, owned the local stores where tenants
bought supplies and the mills where they ground their grain. Locked
into this cycle of dependence and facing inflated real estate
prices, tenants had little hope of purchasing farms. Consequently,
they resorted to varied strategies of rebellion and, occasionally,
to violence. In Land and Liberty, Thomas Humphrey recounts the
dramatic story of the Hudson Valley land riots from the 1750s
through the 1790s. He examines the social dimensions of the
conflict, from individual landlord-tenant relations to
cross-cultural alliances, in the context of colonial structure and
Revolutionary politics. Humphrey offers a multilayered explanation
of why inhabitants of the Hudson Valley resorted to extreme
tactics-and why they achieved mixed results. In contrast to the
despised landlords, many of whom were original American colonists,
rioters included Africans and indigenous peoples as well as German,
Irish, Scottish, Welsh, and English immigrants. All were scrambling
to secure their place in a community that favored landed whites
over other ethnic and racial groups. The insurgents challenged the
elites' title to the land by declaring that the property had been
stolen from the local tribes, by producing conflicting titles of
their own, or by claiming ownership by right of having improved the
land. During the struggle for American independence, the rioters
drew upon Revolutionary rhetoric and took advantage of the war to
acquire properties confiscated from Loyalists. Humphrey finds,
however, that the Revolutionary War failed to overthrow manorialism
entirely. Economic and political inequality resulting from an
inequitable distribution of land persisted. For many citizens of
the new nation, dreams of land and independence remained
unfulfilled.
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