Internal Improvement: National Public Works and the Promise of Popular Government in the Early United States
When the people of British North America threw off their colonial bonds, they sought more than freedom from bad government: most of the founding generation also desired the freedom to create and enjoy good, popular, responsive government. This book traces the central issue on which early Americans pinned their hopes for positive government action--internal improvement.

The nation's early republican governments undertook a wide range of internal improvement projects meant to assure Americans' security, prosperity, and enlightenment--from the building of roads, canals, and bridges to the establishment of universities and libraries. But competitive struggles eventually undermined the interstate and interregional cooperation required, and the public soured on the internal improvement movement. Jacksonian politicians seized this opportunity to promote a more libertarian political philosophy in place of activist, positive republicanism. By the 1850s, the United States had turned toward a laissez-faire system of policy that, ironically, guaranteed more freedom for capitalists and entrepreneurs than ever envisioned in the founders' revolutionary republicanism.

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Internal Improvement: National Public Works and the Promise of Popular Government in the Early United States
When the people of British North America threw off their colonial bonds, they sought more than freedom from bad government: most of the founding generation also desired the freedom to create and enjoy good, popular, responsive government. This book traces the central issue on which early Americans pinned their hopes for positive government action--internal improvement.

The nation's early republican governments undertook a wide range of internal improvement projects meant to assure Americans' security, prosperity, and enlightenment--from the building of roads, canals, and bridges to the establishment of universities and libraries. But competitive struggles eventually undermined the interstate and interregional cooperation required, and the public soured on the internal improvement movement. Jacksonian politicians seized this opportunity to promote a more libertarian political philosophy in place of activist, positive republicanism. By the 1850s, the United States had turned toward a laissez-faire system of policy that, ironically, guaranteed more freedom for capitalists and entrepreneurs than ever envisioned in the founders' revolutionary republicanism.

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Internal Improvement: National Public Works and the Promise of Popular Government in the Early United States

Internal Improvement: National Public Works and the Promise of Popular Government in the Early United States

by John Lauritz Larson
Internal Improvement: National Public Works and the Promise of Popular Government in the Early United States

Internal Improvement: National Public Works and the Promise of Popular Government in the Early United States

by John Lauritz Larson

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Overview

When the people of British North America threw off their colonial bonds, they sought more than freedom from bad government: most of the founding generation also desired the freedom to create and enjoy good, popular, responsive government. This book traces the central issue on which early Americans pinned their hopes for positive government action--internal improvement.

The nation's early republican governments undertook a wide range of internal improvement projects meant to assure Americans' security, prosperity, and enlightenment--from the building of roads, canals, and bridges to the establishment of universities and libraries. But competitive struggles eventually undermined the interstate and interregional cooperation required, and the public soured on the internal improvement movement. Jacksonian politicians seized this opportunity to promote a more libertarian political philosophy in place of activist, positive republicanism. By the 1850s, the United States had turned toward a laissez-faire system of policy that, ironically, guaranteed more freedom for capitalists and entrepreneurs than ever envisioned in the founders' revolutionary republicanism.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780807875643
Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press
Publication date: 11/25/2002
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 352
Lexile: 1530L (what's this?)
File size: 4 MB

About the Author

John Lauritz Larson, professor of history at Purdue University, is coeditor of the Journal of the Early Republic and author of the award-winning Bonds of Enterprise: John Murray Forbes and Western Development in America's Railway Age.

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

Internal Improvement is the single most important contribution to our understanding of antebellum American political economy in the last generation. Larson’s history of public works 'brings the state back in,' or, perhaps more accurately, enables us to see more clearly how the development of democratic politics led to the disappearance of the state, thus clearing the way for new concentrations of irresponsible private power. Improvement-minded Americans crowded the political trough, clamoring for an equalization and escalation of benefits that preempted and discredited long-term planning. Larson’s lucid account of improvement politics is necessary reading for all students of the period — or for anyone interested in the history of American democracy.”—Peter S. Onuf, University of Virginia

“Larson’s long-awaited study of the crusade for internal improvement in the early American republic makes a major contribution to our understanding of the values that shaped the founders' bold experiment in republican governance. Elegantly crafted and well written, it tells its story with energy and verve. . . . Particularly notable is his reconstruction of state-level developments and his critique of the widely accepted notion that government funded internal improvements lacked a broad base of popular support.”—Richard R. John, University of Illinois at Chicago

“An original reexamination of a major issue in nineteenth-century American history, based on primary sources and written with lucidity and verve. Larson confirms the centrality of internal improvements to both the politics and the economic development of the United States. His findings explode the myth that a 'market revolution' was foisted upon a reluctant public.”—Daniel Walker Howe, Oxford University

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