书城外语美国历史(英文版)
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第9章 THE COLONIAL PERIOD(8)

The Southern planter,on his broad acres tilled by slaves,resembled the English landlord on his estates more than he did the colonial farmer who labored with his own hands in the fields and forests.He sold his rice and tobacco in large amounts directly to English factors,who took his entire crop in exchange for goods and cash.His fine clothes,silverware,china,and cutlery he bought in English markets.Loving the ripe old culture of the mother country,he often sent his sons to Oxford or Cambridge for their education.In short,he depended very largely for his prosperity and his enjoyment of life upon close relations with the Old World.He did not even need market towns in which to buy native goods,for they were made on his own plantation by his own artisans who were usually gifted slaves.

The economic condition of the small farmer was totally different.His crops were not big enough to warrant direct connection with English factors or the personal maintenance of a corps of artisans.He needed local markets,and they sprang up to meet the need.Smiths,hatters,weavers,wagon-makers,and potters at neighboring towns supplied him with the rough products of their native skill.The finer goods,bought by the rich planter in England,the small farmer ordinarily could not buy.His wants were restricted to staples like tea and sugar,and between him and the European market stood the merchant.His community was therefore more self-sufficient than the seaboard line of great plantations.It was more isolated,more provincial,more independent,more American.The planter faced the Old East.The farmer faced the New West.

The Westward Movement.-Yeoman and planter nevertheless were alike in one respect.Their land hunger was never appeased.Each had the eye of an expert for new and fertile soil;and so,north and south,as soon as a foothold was secured on the Atlantic coast,the current of migration set in westward,creeping through forests,across rivers,and over mountains.Many of the later immigrants,in their search for cheap lands,were compelled to go to the border;but in a large part the path breakers to the West were native Americans of the second and third generations.Explorers,fired by curiosity and the lure of the mysterious unknown,and hunters,fur traders,and squatters,following their own sweet wills,blazed the trail,opening paths and sending back stories of the new regions they traversed.Then came the regular settlers with lawful titles to the lands they had purchased,sometimes singly and sometimes in companies.

In Massachusetts,the westward movement is recorded in the founding of Springfield in 1636and Great Barrington in 1725.By the opening of the eighteenth century the pioneers of Connecticut had pushed north and west until their outpost towns adjoined the Hudson Valley settlements.In New York,the inland movement was directed by the Hudson River to Albany,and from that old Dutch center it radiated in every direction,particularly westward through the Mohawk Valley.New Jersey was early filled to its borders,the beginnings of the present city of New Brunswick being made in 1681and those of Trenton in 1685.In Pennsylvania,as in New York,the waterways determined the main lines of advance.Pioneers,pushing up through the valley of the Schuylkill,spread over the fertile lands of Berks and Lancaster counties,laying out Reading in 1748.Another current of migration was directed by the Susquehanna,and,in 1726,the first farmhouse was built on the bank where Harrisburg was later founded.Along the southern tier of counties a thin line of settlements stretched westward to Pittsburgh,reaching the upper waters of the Ohio while the colony was still under the Penn family.

In the South the westward march was equally swift.The seaboard was quickly occupied by large planters and their slaves engaged in the cultivation of tobacco and rice.The Piedmont Plateau,lying back from the coast all the way from Maryland to Georgia,was fed by two streams of migration,one westward from the sea and the other southward from the other colonies-Germans from Pennsylvania and Scotch-Irish furnishing the main supply."By 1770,tide-water Virginia was full to overflowing and the 'back country'of the Blue Ridge and the Shenandoah was fully occupied.Even the mountain valleys ...were claimed by sturdy pioneers.Before the Declaration of Independence,the oncoming tide of home-seekers had reached the crest of the Alleghanies."

Beyond the mountains pioneers had already ventured,harbingers of aninvasion that was about to break in upon Kentucky and Tennessee. Nimrod,Daniel Boone,curious to hunt buffaloes,of which he had heard weird reports,passed through the Cumberland Gap and brought back news of a wonderful country awaiting the plow.A hint was sufficient.Singly,in pairs,and in groups,settlers followed the trail he had blazed.A great land corporation,the Transylvania Company,emulating the merchant secured a huge grant of territory and sought profits in quit rents from lands sold to farmers.By the outbreak of the Revolution there were several hundred people in the Kentucky region.Like the older colonists,they did not relish quit rents,and their opposition wrecked the Transylvania Company.TheyDistribution of Population,1790even carried their protests into the Continental Congress in 1776,for by that time they were our "embryo fourteenth colony."