Land Hunger by Mansel G Blackford

Land Hunger by Mansel G Blackford

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Land Hunger by Mansel G Blackford

Land Hunger narrates a history of frontiers in the Ohio Country, the Great Plains, and the Oregon Country. It examines how Native Americans, African Americans, and Euro Americans interacted on important US frontiers and viewed, used, and adapted to environments new to them, just as present-day Americans are having to adapt to climate change.

Land Hunger provides a sweeping overview of settlement in Ohio, Oregon, and the Great PlainsIt is an incisive study of the interactions between White settlers, Native Americans, and African Americans and the environment. Blackford tells an important story of adaptation, failure, and success in the westward movement.

(R. Douglas Hurt, author of Agriculture in the Midwest, 1815–1900)

A seasoned and talented historian tells here the story of how a “lust for land” shaped white settlement in both Ohio in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries and in the Far West and the Great Plains later in the twentieth century. Mansel Blackford blends together intimate details from diaries and rich historical resources to help us better understand the clash between Indigenous traditions of communal land management and the visions of white settlers who saw the natural environmental as a commodity to be transformed into material wealth. This is a wonderful book that connects histories of the Pacific Northwest and the Great Plains to stories of land conquest and commodification further east. It’s also a story that helps those of us who live in these places better understand how we got here.

(Bart Elmore, author of Country Capitalism: How Corporations from the American South Remade Our Economy and the Planet) Mansel G. Blackford is among the nation’s leading business, environmental, and political historians. In this beautifully written book, Blackford explains the ways in which nineteenth century Euro Americans, persuaded of their inherent rights, took Native American lands starting in Ohio, across the plains, and then all the way to Oregon and Washington. Real estate speculation, Blackford determines, was baked into that westward movement. . . . Blackford’s books, moreover, are always readable, powerful, deeply researched, and assignable. (Mark H. Rose, author of Market Rules: Bankers, Presidents, and the Origins of the Great Recession)

Mansel G. Blackford is a professor emeritus of history at the Ohio State University, where he worked in the fields of business history and frontier history for forty years. He is the author or coauthor of a dozen books, several of which deal specifically with Ohio and midwestern history—most recently Columbus, Ohio: Two Centuries of Business and Environmental Change.

SKU Unavailable
ISBN 13 9780821426364
ISBN 10 0821426362
Title Land Hunger
Author Mansel G Blackford
Series New Approaches To Midwestern Studies
Condition Unavailable
Binding Type Paperback
Publisher Ohio University Press
Year published 2025-05-27
Number of pages 210
Cover note Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
Note Unavailable