Dangerous Economies
Dangerous Economies: Status and Commerce in Imperial New York
SERENA R. ZABIN
Series: Early American Studies
Copyright Date: 2009
Published by: University of Pennsylvania Press
Pages: 216
https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt3fhdt2
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Book Info
Dangerous Economies
Book Description:

Before the American Revolution, the people who lived in British North America were not just colonists; they were also imperial subjects. To think of eighteenth-century New Yorkers as Britons rather than incipient Americans allows us fresh investigations into their world. How was the British Empire experienced by those who lived at its margins? How did the mundane affairs of ordinary New Yorkers affect the culture at the center of an enormous commercial empire? Dangerous Economies is a history of New York culture and commerce in the first two thirds of the eighteenth century, when Britain was just beginning to catch up with its imperial rivals, France and Spain. In that sparsely populated city on the fringe of an empire, enslaved Africans rubbed elbows with white indentured servants while the elite strove to maintain ties with European genteel culture. The transience of the city's people, goods, and fortunes created a notably fluid society in which establishing one's own status or verifying another's was a challenge. New York's shifting imperial identity created new avenues for success but also made success harder to define and demonstrate socially. Such a mobile urban milieu was the ideal breeding ground for crime and conspiracy, which became all too evident in 1741, when thirty slaves were executed and more than seventy other people were deported after being found guilty-on dubious evidence-of plotting a revolt. This sort of violent outburst was the unforeseen but unsurprising result of the seething culture that existed at the margins of the British Empire.

eISBN: 978-0-8122-0611-1
Subjects: History
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  1. Front Matter
    Front Matter (pp. [i]-[vi])
  2. Table of Contents
    Table of Contents (pp. [vii]-[viii])
  3. Introduction: Imperial New York City
    Introduction: Imperial New York City (pp. 1-9)

    First, a picture. Looking north into Manhattan from the East River, one sees a panorama of boats: dinghies, sloops, and three-masted schooners. The mass of ships, many with sails billowing, nearly obscures the modest collection of buildings in the background. A more careful inspection of the ships reveals that each one is flying an outsize Union Jack. Upon even closer inspection, one sees tiny figures on the dock in the foreground. Individuals on the Manhattan shore are too distant to distinguish. Hidden from view behind the big sugar warehouses are other landmarks of the city. A telescope might allow us...

  4. Chapter One Where Credit Is Due
    Chapter One Where Credit Is Due (pp. 10-31)

    In the winter of 1737 a New York City shopkeeper named Nathaniel Hazard hauled Thomas Harris, a Connecticut laborer, into court. The shopkeeper claimed that Harris had forged a letter, purportedly written by a minister living seventy miles away, that asked Hazard to give the bearer more than four pounds in cash. Confronted by a court consisting of the city’s mayor and aldermen, Harris gave a full confession of his forgery. The court sentenced Harris to the harshest possible corporal punishment—thirty-nine lashes on his naked back—and then banned him from the city forever.

    The Connecticut man’s attempt to...

  5. Chapter Two Webs of Dependence
    Chapter Two Webs of Dependence (pp. 32-56)

    In 1724 Cadwallader Colden, a member of the New York Council and the colony’s surveyor general, asked his London agent for help setting up a game for his young children. In exchange for a small bag of specie, Colden hoped his correspondent would be willing to send over a few goods as a “small Adventure.” He wanted them, he explained, “to please a litle boy & Girl who want to be merchants as soon as they can speak like their play fellows the Dutch Children here.” Colden’s offhand comment reveals the pervasiveness of trade in the lives of men and...

  6. Chapter Three The Informal Economy
    Chapter Three The Informal Economy (pp. 57-80)

    In the first two-thirds of the eighteenth century, New York tavern keepers were frequently accused of running “disordered” or “disorderly house[s].”¹ The New York Supreme Court indictment against Elizabeth Anderson in 1754 is typical of these accusations: “Elizabeth Anderson late of the said City of New York Huckster is a woman of notorious and ill fame, and keeps a common disordered house of Bawdry and Tipling And that the said Elizabeth frequently harbours and entertains in her said House Negro Slaves and divers other persons of Idle and suspected Character . . . permitting them by Night as well as...

  7. Chapter Four Masters of Distinction
    Chapter Four Masters of Distinction (pp. 81-105)

    In the early summer of 1731 the New-York Gazette convened a “court of manners” for its readers, printing semiserious essays on topics such as tea tables and the taking of snuff. Within this discussion appeared a farcical petition from “the young Tradesmen and Artificers of the City of New-York” who were looking for wives. These middling young men complained that the “gay and splendid Appearance” affected by the “young Ladies about our own station” was so intimidating that the men did not dare to approach them, fearing that they could not “distinguish [the women] from People of the best Estates...

  8. Chapter Five Black Cargo or Crew
    Chapter Five Black Cargo or Crew (pp. 106-131)

    In 1713 Stephen Domingo, an Afro-Spanish native of Carthagena in Colombia, was being held in slavery in New York City. Domingo had been sold to a New Yorker by a British privateer as part of the loot from a Spanish ship captured during Queen Anne’s War (1702–13). Domingo petitioned the New York Common Council for his freedom, claiming that as a freeborn sailor he could not legally be enslaved by Mr. Perce, the man who claimed to own him.

    In eighteenth-century New York enslaved men of African descent rarely achieved freedom merely by asking for it. However, Domingo had...

  9. Chapter Six Status, Commerce, and Conspiracy
    Chapter Six Status, Commerce, and Conspiracy (pp. 132-158)

    On the day after St. Patrick’s Day in 1741, the tinderbox that was New York’s concoction of status, race, and commerce literally went up in flames. On that day the roof of the New York governor’s mansion caught fire. His house was completely destroyed, as were several other buildings adjoining it within Fort George. The next two weeks brought nine more fires. The fires, combined with a number of thefts, spurred a rumor among white New Yorkers that the city’s slaves were planning an uprising to burn down the city, murder and rape its white inhabitants, and hand the city...

  10. Notes
    Notes (pp. 159-192)
  11. Bibliography
    Bibliography (pp. 193-196)
  12. Index
    Index (pp. 197-202)
  13. Acknowledgments
    Acknowledgments (pp. 203-205)
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