Artigo Revisado por pares

“Profits” and the Frontier Land Speculator

1957; Cambridge University Press; Volume: 17; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1017/s0022050700059842

ISSN

1471-6372

Autores

Allan G. Bogue, Margaret Beattie Bogue,

Tópico(s)

American Environmental and Regional History

Resumo

From the days of the confederation through the nineteenth century, the frontier land speculator was a familiar figure in the United States. Perambulating foreigners recorded the activities of this gentleman, and land speculation was discussed in both Congress and in the editorial columns of Western newspapers. Many twentieth-century students of America's political and economic development have dealt in one way or another with frontier land speculation. They have depicted the land speculator at times as a sinister figure, corroding the morals of national or state legislators as the lawmakers endeavored to formulate land policy. Writers have sketched the antagonism between speculator and “actual settler.” Nor have they ignored the effect which the speculator had upon the social and economic development of the region in which he operated. Such commentators have contributed to a literature that has its share of colorful characters and even displays the occasional symbol: star-crossed Robert Morris entering debtors'

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