How the States Got Their Shapes
β Scribed by Mark Stein
- Publisher
- HarperCollins
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- English
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
From Publishers Weekly America's first century was defined by expansion and the negotiation of territories among areas colonized by the French and Spanish, or occupied by natives. The exact location of borders became paramount; playwright and screenwriter Stein amasses the story of each state's border, channeling them into a cohesive whole. Proceeding through the states alphabetically, Stein takes the innovative step of addressing each border-north, south, east, west-separately. Border stories shine a spotlight on many aspects of American history: the 49th parallel was chosen for the northern borders of Minnesota, North Dakota, and Montana because they ensured England's access to the Great Lakes, vital to their fur trade; in 1846, Washington D.C. residents south of the Potomac successfully petitioned to rejoin Virginia (called both "retrocession" and "a crime") in order to keep out free African-Americans. Aside from tales of violent conquest and political glad-handing, there's early, breathtaking tales of American politicos' favorite sport, gerrymandering (in 1864, Idaho judge Sidney Edgerton single-handedly "derailed" Idaho's proposed boundary, to Montana's benefit, with $2,000 in gold). American history enthusiasts should be captivated by this fun, informative text. Copyright Β© Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. Review βFor anyone whoβs been confounded by the largest of all jigsaw puzzles, the one that carved out those fifty weirdly formed states, here is the solution. Itβs history, itβs geography, itβs comedy, itβs indispensable.β (ANDRO LINKLATER, author of The Fabric of America: How Our Borders and Boundaries Shaped the Country and Forged Our National Identity ) βGive me the splendid irregularities any day. God bless the panhandles and notches, the West Virginias and Oklahomas.β (Wall Street Journal ) βIf you ever wondered why Delaware owns a small portion of the southwest New Jersey coast, the answer is here!β (Library Journal ) βA fascinating and wonderfully entertaining account of an often-overlooked oddity of Americaβs history: how the jigsaw-puzzle layout of the United States emerged. I never thought a book on geography could be funny, but Mark Stein has pulled it off.β (Vogue )
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
From Publishers Weekly America's first century was defined by expansion and the negotiation of territories among areas colonized by the French and Spanish, or occupied by natives. The exact location of borders became paramount; playwright and screenwriter Stein amasses the story of each state's bo
Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Don't skip this -- Alabama -- Alaska -- Arizona -- Arkansas -- California -- Colorado -- Delaware -- District of Columbia -- Florida -- Georgia -- Hawaii -- Idaho -- Illinois -- Indiana -- Iowa -- Kansas -- Kentucky -- Louisiana -- Maine -- Maryland -- Massachusett
xv, 332 p. : 24 cm
xv, 332 pages : 24 cm