"The Making of Nantucket. Family Lives and Fortunes in the Nineteenth Century, the book has as its subject the striking achievement of a small town resourceful enough to have fashioned a fortune from the sea and then, having lost it, to have been able to reinvent itself as a burgeoning summer resort. The story on the life of one of the leading local merchants who lived long enough (from 1791 to 1878) to illustrate the major changes that took place and for whom there is sufficient documentation in the archives. American ...
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"The Making of Nantucket. Family Lives and Fortunes in the Nineteenth Century, the book has as its subject the striking achievement of a small town resourceful enough to have fashioned a fortune from the sea and then, having lost it, to have been able to reinvent itself as a burgeoning summer resort. The story on the life of one of the leading local merchants who lived long enough (from 1791 to 1878) to illustrate the major changes that took place and for whom there is sufficient documentation in the archives. American commercial success in the years after the Revolution was based heavily on maritime trade and in this endeavor Nantucket had a brief, but significant, part to play. The chapters of the book provide a local perspective on several important developments in this part of the history of the early republic. Chap. 1. A description of the packet trade, the life-line to the island, mainly between Nantucket and New York, and excerpts from an original manuscript on the War of 1812 in Long Island Sound. Chap. 2. The importance of family relations among the members of the ruling class in the fashioning of the social structure. Chap. 3. The organization of the island whaling industry with a comparison of the gains and losses. Chap. 4. The decline of whaling, the search for new investments, and the transition of Nantucket to a summer resort. Chap. 5. Various views and comments about daily life on the island in the middle years of the 19th century."--Provided by publisher.
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