Planting an Empire: The Early Chesapeake in British North America

Planting an Empire: The Early Chesapeake in British North America

Planting an Empire: The Early Chesapeake in British North America

Planting an Empire: The Early Chesapeake in British North America

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Overview

Planting an Empire explores the social and economic history of the Chesapeake region, revealing a story of two similar but distinct colonies in early America.

Linked by the Chesapeake Bay, Virginia and Maryland formed a prosperous and politically important region in British North America before the American Revolution. Yet these "sister" colonies—alike in climate and soil, emphasis on tobacco farming, and use of enslaved labor—eventually followed divergent social and economic paths. Jean B. Russo and J. Elliott Russo review the shared history of these two colonies, examining not only their unsteady origins, the powerful role of tobacco, and the slow development of a settler society but also the economic disparities and political jealousies that divided them.

Recounting the rich history of the Chesapeake Bay region over a 150-year period, the authors discuss in clear and accessible prose the key developments common to both colonies as well as important regional events, including Maryland's “plundering time,” Bacon’s Rebellion in Virginia, and the opening battles of the French and Indian War. They explain how the internal differences and regional discord of the seventeenth century gave way in the eighteenth century to a more coherent regional culture fostered by a shared commitment to slavery and increasing socio-economic maturity.

Addressing an undergraduate audience, the Russos study not just wealthy plantation owners and government officials but all the people involved in planting an empire in the Chesapeake region—poor and middling planters, women, Native Americans, enslaved and free blacks, and non-English immigrants. No other book offers such a comprehensive brief history of the Maryland and Virginia colonies and their place within the emerging British Empire.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781421406947
Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
Publication date: 07/02/2012
Series: Regional Perspectives on Early America
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 256
File size: 4 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Jean B. Russo is associate general editor of Archives of Maryland Online and coeditor of The Diary of William Faris: The Daily Life of an Annapolis Silversmith and Colonial Chesapeake Society. J. Elliott Russo is a contributing editor to the Maryland State Archives and author of numerous articles, book chapters, and papers on colonial Maryland and Virginia.


Jean B. Russo is associate general editor of Archives of Maryland Online and coeditor of The Diary of William Faris: The Daily Life of an Annapolis Silversmith and Colonial Chesapeake Society.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Prologue: Leah and Rachel
1. Great Expectations
2. Troubled Times
3. Transformations
4. Coming Together, Moving Apart
5. A Society Enslaved
Epilogue: Grappling with an Empire
Notes
Essay on Sources
Index

What People are Saying About This

Lorena S. Walsh

A valuable and wide-ranging summary of social, economic, and political developments in the Chesapeake from the beginning of European settlement to the Revolution.

Lorena S. Walsh, author of Motives of Honor, Pleasure, and Profit: Plantation Management in the Colonial Chesapeake, 1607–1763

From the Publisher

A valuable and wide-ranging summary of social, economic, and political developments in the Chesapeake from the beginning of European settlement to the Revolution.
—Lorena S. Walsh, author of Motives of Honor, Pleasure, and Profit: Plantation Management in the Colonial Chesapeake, 1607–1763

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