The Fisherman's Cause: Atlantic Commerce and Maritime Dimensions of the American Revolution
This book examines the connections between the commercial fishing industry in colonial America and the American Revolution, Christopher P. Magra places the origins and progress of this formative event in a wider Atlantic context. The Fisherman's Cause utilizes extensive research from archives in the United States, Canada, and the UK in order to take this Atlantic approach. Dried, salted cod represented the most lucrative export in New England. The fishing industry connected colonial producers to transatlantic markets in the Iberian Peninsula and the West Indies. Parliament's coercive regulation of this branch of colonial maritime commerce contributed to colonists' willingness to engage in a variety of revolutionary activities. Colonists then used the sea to resist British authority. Fish merchants converted transatlantic trade routes into military supply lines, and they transformed fishing vessels into warships. Fishermen armed and manned the first American Navy, served in the first coast guard units, and fought on privateers. These maritime activities helped secure American independence.
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The Fisherman's Cause: Atlantic Commerce and Maritime Dimensions of the American Revolution
This book examines the connections between the commercial fishing industry in colonial America and the American Revolution, Christopher P. Magra places the origins and progress of this formative event in a wider Atlantic context. The Fisherman's Cause utilizes extensive research from archives in the United States, Canada, and the UK in order to take this Atlantic approach. Dried, salted cod represented the most lucrative export in New England. The fishing industry connected colonial producers to transatlantic markets in the Iberian Peninsula and the West Indies. Parliament's coercive regulation of this branch of colonial maritime commerce contributed to colonists' willingness to engage in a variety of revolutionary activities. Colonists then used the sea to resist British authority. Fish merchants converted transatlantic trade routes into military supply lines, and they transformed fishing vessels into warships. Fishermen armed and manned the first American Navy, served in the first coast guard units, and fought on privateers. These maritime activities helped secure American independence.
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The Fisherman's Cause: Atlantic Commerce and Maritime Dimensions of the American Revolution

The Fisherman's Cause: Atlantic Commerce and Maritime Dimensions of the American Revolution

by Christopher P. Magra
The Fisherman's Cause: Atlantic Commerce and Maritime Dimensions of the American Revolution

The Fisherman's Cause: Atlantic Commerce and Maritime Dimensions of the American Revolution

by Christopher P. Magra

eBook

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Overview

This book examines the connections between the commercial fishing industry in colonial America and the American Revolution, Christopher P. Magra places the origins and progress of this formative event in a wider Atlantic context. The Fisherman's Cause utilizes extensive research from archives in the United States, Canada, and the UK in order to take this Atlantic approach. Dried, salted cod represented the most lucrative export in New England. The fishing industry connected colonial producers to transatlantic markets in the Iberian Peninsula and the West Indies. Parliament's coercive regulation of this branch of colonial maritime commerce contributed to colonists' willingness to engage in a variety of revolutionary activities. Colonists then used the sea to resist British authority. Fish merchants converted transatlantic trade routes into military supply lines, and they transformed fishing vessels into warships. Fishermen armed and manned the first American Navy, served in the first coast guard units, and fought on privateers. These maritime activities helped secure American independence.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780511738739
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: 04/06/2009
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 645 KB

About the Author

Christopher P. Magra completed his Ph.D. at the University of Pittsburgh. He is now an Assistant Professor of Early American/Atlantic History and Director of the Atlantic History Center at Cal State Northridge University. He has published articles related to maritime history in the International Journal of Maritime History, the New England Quarterly, and the Northern Mariner. The Canadian Nautical Research Society honored him with the Keith Matthews Award for the best 2007 article published in the Northern Mariner.

Table of Contents

Introduction; Part I. The Rise of the Colonial Cod Fisheries: 1. Fish; 2. Fish merchants; 3. Fishermen; Part II. Atlantic Origins of the American Revolutionary War: 4. Cod and the Atlantic economy; 5. Atlantic business competition and the political economy of cod: part one; 6. Atlantic business competition and the political economy of cod: part two; 7. The New England trade and fisheries act; Part III. The Military Mobilization of the Fishing Industry: 8. From trade routes to supply lines; 9. The first American navy; 10. Starving the enemy and feeding the troops; 11. From fishermen to fighting men; Conclusion.
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