Size: 6 x 9
Pages: 288
Illustrations: 19 b&w halftones
Huw David
The inclusion of this book in the Open Carolina collection is made possible by the generous funding of
University of South Carolina Libraries
"Huw David's superb study of the transatlantic community of Carolina traders is an important contribution to American Revolutionary historiography. Deeply researched and powerfully argued, Trade, Politics, and Revolution complicates and enriches our understanding of the coming of the American Revolution and its consequences."—Peter S. Onuf, University of Virginia
"Huw David shows brilliantly how entangled South Carolina's economy was before and after independence and illustrates with penetrating insight how this continuing dependency shaped political action."—Trevor Burnard, University of Melbourne
"This is a highly readable history of the creation, and then the demise, of political economic relations between colonial South Carolina and London. David's study will be indispensable to scholars of South Carolina and the Revolutionary era, who will find his explanations for the colony's enthusiastic embrace of the American cause both exciting and original."—Emma Hart, University of St. Andrews
"Huw David masterfully reveals how the tumultuous politics of the British Atlantic in the eighteenth century were entwined with shifting structures of commerce and trade. Impeccably researched and clearly written, this book explains both the ruptures and enduring bonds between South Carolina and Britain in the age of the American Revolution. Atlantic history at its best!"—Jay Sexton, University of Missouri
"Huw David has produced a detailed, elegantly written, and masterful study of merchants on both sides of the Atlantic before, during, and after the American Revolution. He encourages us to rethink how America was bound and then unbound to Britain during a critical time for both places."—Patrick Griffin, University of Notre Dame
"Trade, Politics, and Revolution is well researched and sharply written... this excellent study of the Carolina trade between 1730 and 1790 will prove useful to scholars of South Carolina, Atlantic political economies, and debates about the causes of the American Revolution."—Journal of Southern History
"beautifully organized and complete with biographical sketches of his characters, illustrations of particular people, seascapes, unique buildings and scenes, along with data tables...This fascinating manuscript gives a chronology that is very helpful in placing the history of the relationships between the maritime merchants and the Charleston citizens. Also there is a brief but informative sketch of many of the merchants and their investments and families."—Southeastern Librarian
"Provides a new perspective on the American Revolution in South Carolina, and it is among the most effective in recent memory at linking politics on the colonial and imperial levels with Atlantic trade in order to understand the complex origins of the American Revolution"—The English Hisorical Review
"In Trade, Politics, and Revolution Huw David provides important details about South Carolina's merchant-planter elite and their role in mediating transatlantic trading and political relationships. David's narrative illuminates in considerable detail the workings of South Carolina's export trade and the central role of a small group of individuals in London in organizing this trade. This narrative detail will be valuable for many scholars."—The Journal of American History
Winner of the 2018 South Carolina Historical Society's George C. Rogers Jr. Award for best book of South Carolina history
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