The Southern Frontier, 1670-1732
Verner W Crane author Steven C Hahn editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:The University of Alabama Press
Published:30th Jan '04
Should be back in stock very soon
This volume recounts the clashes and intrigues that played out over the landscape of the Old Southwest and across six decades as the Spanish, French, British, and ultimately Americans vied for control. Rivalry began soon after initial discovery, mapping, and exploration as the world powers, particularly England and France, competed for control of the lucrative fur trade in the Mississippi valley. The French attempted to establish trade networks stretching from the Atlantic Ocean inland to the Mississippi River and northward from ports on the Gulf of Mexico to the Ohio River. But they found the British already entrenched there. Verner Crane guides us through this multinational struggle and navigates the border wars and diplomatic intrigues that played crucial roles in the settlement of the South by Euro-Americans. In his new introduction, Steven Hahn places the work in the context of its time, sketches its publication history, and provides biographical information on Crane.
It was during the critical period from 670 to 1732 that the tide changed from Spanish to English dominance of the southeastern United States. Crane's treatment of this colonial era is clear concise, and persuasive. Highly recommended, - Frank T. Schnell coeditor of Antiquities of the Southern Indians, Particularly of the Georgia Tribes
ISBN: 9780817350826
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 750g
424 pages