About This Book
The study traces the emergence of the trans-Allegheny West as an integral part of the United States during the 1819–1829 decade, examining settlement patterns, economic and social development, and distinctive regional identities. It analyzes how frontier commerce, migration, and infrastructure ambitions shaped local institutions and attitudes, and how national controversies—financial crisis, the Missouri debate over slavery, tariff conflicts, the Monroe policy on foreign powers, and partisan realignments—interacted with western interests. The narrative links policy disputes and elections to changing notions of state sovereignty and the growing political weight of western states.
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