No Cover Image
Town Born: The Political Economy of New England from Its Founding to the Revolution
Barry Levy
Series: Early American Studies
Copyright Date: 2009
Published by: University of Pennsylvania Press
Pages: 360
https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt3fj2qj
Search for reviews of this book
Book Info
Town Born
Book Description:

In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, British colonists found the New World full of resources. With land readily available but workers in short supply, settlers developed coercive forms of labor-indentured servitude and chattel slavery-in order to produce staple export crops like rice, wheat, and tobacco. This brutal labor regime became common throughout most of the colonies. An important exception was New England, where settlers and their descendants did most work themselves. In Town Born, Barry Levy shows that New England's distinctive and far more egalitarian order was due neither to the colonists' peasant traditionalism nor to the region's inhospitable environment. Instead, New England's labor system and relative equality were every bit a consequence of its innovative system of governance, which placed nearly all land under the control of several hundred self-governing town meetings. As Levy shows, these town meetings were not simply sites of empty democratic rituals but were used to organize, force, and reconcile laborers, families, and entrepreneurs into profitable export economies. The town meetings protected the value of local labor by persistently excluding outsiders and privileging the town born. The town-centered political economy of New England created a large region in which labor earned respect, relative equity ruled, workers exercised political power despite doing the most arduous tasks, and the burdens of work were absorbed by citizens themselves. In a closely observed and well-researched narrative, Town Born reveals how this social order helped create the foundation for American society.

eISBN: 978-0-8122-0261-8
Subjects: History
You do not have access to this book on JSTOR. Try logging in through your institution for access.
Log in to your personal account or through your institution.
Table of Contents
Export Selected Citations Export to NoodleTools Export to RefWorks Export to EasyBib Export a RIS file (For EndNote, ProCite, Reference Manager, Zotero, Mendeley...) Export a Text file (For BibTex)
Select / Unselect all
  1. Front Matter
    Front Matter (pp. i-iv)
  2. Table of Contents
    Table of Contents (pp. v-vi)
  3. INTRODUCTION
    INTRODUCTION (pp. 1-14)

    In 1760, some fifteen years before the American Revolution, the young John Adams witnessed and became fascinated with, though somewhat frightened by, the exuberance of autonomous workers at play. Taking a break from his legal studies, Adams “rode to the Iron works landing” in Weymouth, Massachusetts, “to see a vessel launched.” These happy affairs symbolized the viability of the New England economy, the skill and cooperation of the empowered workers, and—assuming the ship floated—the profitable completion of a long job. Afterward, the workers and town folk celebrated nearby at Thayer’s tavern: “The rabble filled the house,” noted Adams,...

  4. PART I Foundations
    • CHAPTER ONE Political Economy
      CHAPTER ONE Political Economy (pp. 17-50)

      When the principal inhabitants of Swallowfield met together in a town meeting for the first time, they defined themselves as “a society or common doing of a multitude of free men collected together and united by common accord and covenants among themselves.” They agreed to hold more meetings, “to the end we may the better and more quietly live together in good love and amity, to the praise of God and for the better serving of her Majestie.” They assented to twenty-six articles, including a pledge to dissuade young couples who could not afford a house from marrying; a pledge...

    • CHAPTER TWO Stripes
      CHAPTER TWO Stripes (pp. 51-83)

      In his journal, John Winthrop described punishments for misbehavior more frequently than sermons inculcating proper conduct. Inflicting punishment and studying its effective application were a significant part of his responsibilities as governor. During the voyage to Massachusetts, he made two overly pugnacious young men “walk upon the deck till night with their hands bound behind them.” When Winthrop detected a teenaged servant overcharging a child, he ordered the servant’s hands “to be tied up to a bar and hanged a basket with stones about his neck and so he stood 2 houres.” Once in Massachusetts, his task shifted from simply...

    • CHAPTER THREE Settlement
      CHAPTER THREE Settlement (pp. 84-122)

      In 1845, Nathaniel Hawthorne returned to his native Salem from Concord. In 1846, he obtained a position at the Salem Custom House, the subject of the opening of his most famous novel, The Scarlet Letter. In that introductory sketch, he puzzled about why the town of Salem had “a hold on my affections.” Speaking of the present, he remarked, “the spell survived, and just as powerfully as if the natal spot were an earthly paradise… no matter that the place is joyless for him; that he is weary of the old wooden houses, the mud and dust, the dead level...

  5. PART II Development
    • CHAPTER FOUR Political Fabric
      CHAPTER FOUR Political Fabric (pp. 125-152)

      In his 1654 history of Massachusetts, Edward Johnson boasted that the residents of Rowley “were the first people that set upon making of cloth in this Western World.”¹ Although Johnson failed to recognize Native American weaving, which utilized a variety of local materials and flourished well before European contact, his declaration’s ethnocentrism is intentional. The colonists were willing to eat maize as the natives did, but refused to dress like them. To maintain their identity, they needed to wear European cloth. Many historians have written well about the importance of fashion in creating colonial identities.² However, in the case of...

    • CHAPTER FIVE Of Wharves and Men
      CHAPTER FIVE Of Wharves and Men (pp. 153-182)

      The New England ideal of the godly city included limiting outsiders, making labor more valuable, and attaching workers to the locality. In turn, city dwellers were required to attend church, to keep the Sabbath, to speak no oaths except on special occasions, to learn the Bible, and to attempt to transform their own sinful selves and their children into Christians. Equally important, they had to work at a vocation. This ideal of a locally rooted, well-disciplined labor force seemed as difficult to achieve in the New World as it had in the Old; while England had a surplus of labor...

    • CHAPTER SIX Rural Shipbuilding
      CHAPTER SIX Rural Shipbuilding (pp. 183-206)

      After 1650, Boston merchants invested thousands of pounds sterling in rural Massachusetts towns to develop shipbuilding and the resources it required. Boston merchants capitalized shipbuilding enterprises not only in coastal towns such as Salem, Charlestown, and Newburyport, where their investments supplemented those of local merchants, but also in inland towns that had river access to the Atlantic and good timber lands but little local capital. Between 1686 and 1713, rural shipwrights were responsible for 30 percent of all the ship tonnage built in Massachusetts. Taunton and Scituate were particularly important rural shipbuilding centers.¹

      Shipbuilding demanded enormous quantities of wood and...

    • CHAPTER SEVEN Crews
      CHAPTER SEVEN Crews (pp. 207-234)

      New England’s first knight was William Phips, a mariner and shipbuilder from the Kennebec River in what is now Maine. In 1687, with English and Boston financial backing, he discovered and retrieved a treasure of some £300,000 in gold and silver from the sunken Spanish galleon Concepcion in the shallows north of Hispaniola. Finding and retrieving the treasure was easy compared to returning it intact to England. As Cotton Mather described it, “But there was one extraordinary distress which Captain Phips himself plunged into: for his men were come out with him upon seamen’s wages, at so much per month;...

  6. PART III Town People
    • CHAPTER EIGHT Orphans
      CHAPTER EIGHT Orphans (pp. 237-262)

      The prescriptive literature read in colonial Massachusetts demanded a well-ordered patriarchal household. Yet this normative ideal, coupled with Puritans’ reforming zeal, often justified the intrusive intervention of public authorities into the family. Many town selectmen took the patriarchal ideal so seriously that they removed children from fathers who failed to discipline, educate, or employ them properly. Indeed, far from forming a society that required children to live with their parents, New Englanders adopted many policies that propelled the scattering of young children among households. Early modern English households had often sent their children out to service at age fourteen, but...

    • CHAPTER NINE Prodigals or Milquetoasts?
      CHAPTER NINE Prodigals or Milquetoasts? (pp. 263-288)

      Thomas Shepard, the minister of Cambridge, Massachusetts, complained in 1672 that “there are divers children who… grow to that pride, and unnaturalness, and stubbornness, that they will not serve their parents except they be hired to it.” Shepard’s concern about the premature autonomy of youth and the inversion of proper parent-child relationships arose from the distinctive organization of labor in the colony, which centered not on the family but on the town. Not only did Massachusetts farmers lack the ample supply of labor available to property holders in Shepard’s native England, but the colony and its towns carefully controlled the...

  7. Epilogue
    Epilogue (pp. 289-296)

    In 1727, the selectmen of Middleborough, Massachusetts, petitioned the General Court for an abatement of their provincial taxes on the ground “that their husbandry has been neglected and the people greatly impoverished” because of “a very grievous sickness by which great numbers among them have been carried off, and most of the survivors visited therewith.” The town received a £40 abatement. Other towns sent similar petitions. In 1693, Deerfield asked for an abatement because of “their distressed and hazardous condition being the most utmost frontier town in the county of west Hampshire and much impoverished by keeping and maintaining of...

  8. NOTES
    NOTES (pp. 297-338)
  9. SELECTED PRIMARY SOURCES
    SELECTED PRIMARY SOURCES (pp. 339-344)
  10. Index
    Index (pp. 345-352)
  11. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
    ACKNOWLEDGMENTS (pp. 353-354)
University of Pennsylvania Press logo