Chapter 12. The altruism of an unheroic age
- what cosmopolitanism and self-purity did to Pennsylvania, paternalism and philanthropy did to Georgia
- mid-18th century
- distinctly unheroic
- more concerned about living with spiritual and intellectual means than with seeking unfamiliar horizons
- philanthropy
- directed toward the removal of poverty and vice
- attempt to eliminate eyesores to gentlemen walking the streets of London
- proposal in 1730 to establish colony in Georgia
- made a welcome impression on the English mind
- such a thoroughly altruistic enterprise became the subject of much poetry and self-congratulation
- leaders free or sordid moties
- planned to the most detailed (petty) specifications
- General James Oglethorpe
- man of action
- clear and specific in his purpose
- arbitrary and impatient
- unbending with the doctrinaire rigidity of the completely practical man
- Lord John Percival
- co-leader of project
- wealthy aristocrat
- crucial mistake was making specific plans too far in advance and too far from the scene of the experiement
- new colonists chosen from needy applicants
- background and moral character investigated
- those who showed promise of becoming sturdy colonists
- Sir Robert Montgomery proposed a geometric scheme of settlement
- the mapping of the geography of a pipedream
- basic errors
- rigidity of rules for ownership, use, sale and inheritance of land
- by preventing free accumulation, exchange, and exploration of the land, the planners stultified the life of the colony
- acted as if they knew the facts
- imposed their ignorance on the settlers
- Negro was perceived as a menace to the scheme
- settlers were to do their own labor
- prohibition of slavery was integral to plan
- grandiose plans for Georgia's place in England's economy
- an envisioned silk trade
- ad the plan succeeded, Georgia would have been a tidy, antiseptic, efficient, and thoroughly dull place
- major flaw was that this scheme had to be carried out by real people in a real world
Chapter 14. A Charity Colony
- London philanthropists
- trying to make Georgia a European dream
- less interested in what was possible in America than in what had been impossible in Europe
- 18th century English society
- nothing more valued than security and independence
- acceptance of his own place by each party (e.g., squire and peasant)
- America provided a man caught in the lower class a chance to escape, to accept a new life
- Georgia settlers were at a disadvantage being in the hand of their benefactors
- Trustees of the colony
- held a destructively paternalistic attitude
- their arrogance and condescension bred dependence and discontent
- settlers made their complaints and looked for aid to their benefactors in distant London
- Sponsors found themselves becoming increasingly involved in the affairs of the settlement
- plight of colonists
- their new home allowed them to become neither prosperous nor hopeful
- lack of special skills as backwoodsmen
- colonists cursed by universal ills of bureaucracy
- pettiness
- arbitrariness
- corruption
- most disastrous of trustees' plans concerned the land
- rigid provisions removed incentive to increased productivity
- trustees discovered they had assumed a responsibility they could neither fulfill nor abandon
- disgruntled colonists found themselves shackled to unfertile plots of land
- laws prevented adding to, seeling, or exchanging parcels of land
- alternative was flight
- attempt at prohibition, an unenforceable act
- silk industry
- last project to bite the dust
- story of futile bickerings and unfulfilled hopes
- sponsors became victims of their own propaganda
- in 1742, when half the silkworms in Savannah died, the fact that Georgia's climate was not suited to raising silkworms was brutally confirmed
- trustees gave up their charter in 1752
- had burdened themselves with powers no one could wisely execute from London
- less than half the original population remained
- at the time of the Revolution, Georgia was least prosperous and least populous of colonies
Chapter 16: Perils of Altruism
- tried to incorporate too much of a plan
- frame of mind which stifled the spontaneity and experimental spirit which were real spiritual wealth of America
The book has received mostly positive reviews at Amazon.
I chuckled over this comment from a 2-star review.
This is not a coherent history, but a series of disjointed stories, all related to the original settlements in the US. There is virtually no analysis, only poorly documented anecdotes.The book includes a 47-page section of Bibliographic Notes, which I used to bulk up my reading list in 1976. The content is thoroughly documented.
The author does not present his research in a straightforward, chronological manner; he's not writing a textbook. And the book is full of thoughtful analysis, which the reader may not always agree with.
Related posts:
The Americans: The Colonial Experience by Daniel Boorstin, Part 1. A City Upon a Hill: The Puritans of Massachusetts. (12/8/2014)
The Americans: The Colonial Experience. Part 2. The Inward Plantation: The Quakers of Pennsylvania. (12/10/2014)
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