To the Vast and Beautiful Land gathers eleven essays written by Light Townsend Cummins, a foremost authority on Texas and Louisiana during the Spanish colonial era, and traces the arc of the author’s career over a quarter of a century. Each essay includes a new introduction linking the original article to current scholarship and forms the connective tissue for the volume. A new bibliography updates and supplements the sources cited in the essays.
From the “enduring community” of Anglo-American settlers in colonial Natchez to the Gálvez family along the Gulf Coast and their participation in the American Revolution, Cummins shows that mercantile commerce and land acquisition went hand-in-hand as dual motivations for the migration of English-speakers into Louisiana and Texas. Mercantile trade dominated by Anglo-Americans increasingly tied the Mississippi valley and western Gulf Coast to the English-speaking ports of the Atlantic world bridging two centuries, shifting it away from earlier French and Spanish commercial patterns. As a result, Anglo-Americans moved to the region as residents and secured land from Spanish authorities, who often welcomed them with favorable settlement policies. This steady flow of settlement set the stage for families such as the Austins—first Moses and later his son Stephen—to take root and further “Anglocize” a colonial region.
Taken together, To the Vast and Beautiful Land makes a new contribution to the growing literature on the history of the Spanish borderlands in North America.
Author(s): Light Townsend Cummins
Series: Elma Dill Russell Spencer Series in the West and Southwest
Publisher: Texas A&M University Press
Year: 2019
Language: English
Pages: 288
Cover
Title
Copyright
Contents
Preface
Chapter 1. An Enduring Community: Anglo-American Settlers at Colonial Natchez and in the Felicianas, 1774–1810
Chapter 2. Anglo Merchants and Capital Migration in Spanish Colonial New Orleans, 1763–1803
Chapter 3. The Gálvez Family and Spanish Participation in the Independence of the United States of America
Chapter 4. Oliver Pollock and George Rogers Clark’s Service of Supply: A Case Study in Financial Disaster
Chapter 5. “Her Weary Pilgrimage”: The Remarkable Mississippi River Adventures of Anne McMeans, 1778–1782
Chapter 6. Oliver Pollock’s Plantations: An Early Anglo Landowner on the Lower Mississippi, 1769–1824
Chapter 7. “In Territories So Extensive and Fertile”: Spanishand English-Speaking Peoples in Louisiana before the Purchase
Chapter 8. Oliver Pollock and the Creation of an American Identity in Spanish Colonial Louisiana
Chapter 9. Spanish Louisiana Land Policy: Antecedent to the Anglo-American Colonization of East Texas, 1769–1821
Chapter 10. Church Courts, Marriage Breakdown, and Separation in Spanish Louisiana, West Florida, and Texas, 1763–1836
Chapter 11. Across the Sabine: The Stephen F. Austin Family in Spanish and Antebellum Louisiana
Bibliographic Essay
Index
Other Books in the Elma Dill Russell Spencer Series in the West and Southwest