The text and notes come from chapter 1 of The Frontier in American History (New York: Henry Holt, 1921). Paragraph numbers are my own.
[2] Behind institutions, behind constitutional forms and modifications, lie the vital forces that call these organs into life and shape them to meet changing conditions. The peculiarity of American institutions is, the fact that they have been compelled to adapt themselves to the changes of an expanding people — to the changes involved in crossing a continent, in winning a wilderness, and in developing at each area of this progress out of the primitive economic and political conditions of the frontier into the complexity of city life. Said Calhoun in 1817, “We are great, and rapidly — I was about to say fearfully — growing!”,2 So saying, he touched the distinguishing feature of American life. All peoples show development; the germ theory of politics has been sufficiently emphasized. In the case of most nations, however, the development has occurred in a limited area; and if the nation has expanded, it has met other growing peoples whom it has conquered. But in the case of the United States we have a different phenomenon. Limiting our attention to the Atlantic coast, we have the familiar phenomenon of the evolution of institutions in a limited area, such as the rise of representative government; into complex organs; the progress from primitive industrial society, without division of labor, up to manufacturing civilization. But we have in addition to this a recurrence of the process of evolution in each western area reached in the process of expansion. Thus American development has exhibited not merely advance along a single line, but a return to primitive conditions on a continually advancing frontier line, and a new development for that area. American social development has been continually beginning over again on the frontier. This perennial rebirth, this fluidity of American life, this expansion westward with its new opportunities, its continuous touch with the simplicity of primitive society, furnish the forces dominating American character. The true point of view in the history of this nation is not the Atlantic coast, it is the Great West. Even the slavery struggle, which is made so exclusive an object of attention by writers like Professor von Holst, occupies its important place in American history because of its relation to westward expansion.
[3] In this advance, the frontier is the outer edge of the wave — the meeting point between savagery and civilization. Much has been written about the frontier from the point of view of border warfare and the chase, but as a field for the serious study of the economist and the historian it has been neglected.
[4] The American frontier is sharply distinguished from the European frontier — a fortified boundary line running through dense populations. The most significant thing about the American frontier is, that it lies at the hither edge of free land. In the census reports it is treated as the margin of that settlement which has a density of two or more to the square mile. The term is an elastic one, and for our purposes does not need sharp definition. We shall consider the whole frontier belt including the Indian country and the outer margin of the “settled area” of the census reports. This paper will make no attempt to treat the subject exhaustively; its aim is simply to call attention to the frontier as a fertile field for investigation, and to suggest some of the problems which arise in connection with it.
[5] In the settlement of America we have to observe how European life entered the continent, and how America modified and developed that life and reacted on Europe. Our early history is the study of European germs developing in an American environment. Too exclusive attention has been paid by institutional students to the Germanic origins, too little to the American factors. The frontier is the line of most rapid and effective Americanization. The wilderness masters the colonist. It finds him a European in dress, industries, tools, modes of travel, and thought. It takes him from the railroad car and puts him in the birch canoe. It strips off the garments of civilization and arrays him in the hunting shirt and the moccasin. It puts him in the log cabin of the Cherokee and Iroquois and runs an Indian palisade around him. Before long he has gone to planting Indian corn and plowing with a sharp stick, he shouts the war cry and takes the scalp in orthodox Indian fashion. In short, at the frontier the environment is at first too strong for the man. He must accept the conditions which it furnishes, or perish, and so he fits himself into the Indian clearings and follows the Indian trails. Little by little he transforms the wilderness, but the outcome is not the old Europe, not simply the development of Germanic germs, any more than the first phenomenon was a case of reversion to the Germanic mark. The fact is, that here is a new product that is American. At first, the frontier was the Atlantic coast. It was the frontier of Europe in a very real sense. Moving westward, the frontier became more and more American. As successive terminal moraines result from successive glaciations, so each frontier leaves its traces behind it, and when it becomes a settled area the region still partakes of the frontier characteristics. Thus the advance of the frontier has meant a steady movement away from the influence of Europe, a steady growth of independence on American lines. And to study this advance, the men who grew up under these conditions, and the political, economic, and social results of it, is to study the really American part of our history.
[6] In the course of the seventeenth century the frontier was advanced up the Atlantic river courses, just beyond the “fall line,” and the tidewater region became the settled area. In the first half of the eighteenth century another advance occurred. Traders followed the Delaware and Shawnee Indians to the Ohio as early as the end of the first quarter of the century.3 Gov. Spotswood, of Virginia, made an expedition in 1714 across the Blue Ridge. The end of the first quarter of the century saw the advance of the Scotch-Irish and the Palatine Germans up the Shenandoah Valley into the western part of Virginia, and along the Piedmont region of the Carolinas.4 The Germans in New York pushed the frontier of settlement up the Mohawk to German Flats.5 In Pennsylvania the town of Bedford indicates the line of settlement. Settlements had begun on New River, a branch of the Kanawha, and on the sources of the Yadkin and French Broad.6 The King attempted to arrest the advance by his proclamation of 1763,7 forbidding settlements beyond the sources of the rivers flowing into the Atlantic, but in vain. In the period of the Revolution the frontier crossed the Alleghanies into Kentucky and Tennessee, and the upper waters of the Ohio were settled.8 When the first census was taken in 1790, the continuous settled area was bounded by a line which ran near the coast of Maine, and included New England except a portion of Vermont and New Hampshire, New York along the Hudson and up the Mohawk about Schenectady, eastern and southern Pennsylvania, Virginia well across the Shenandoah Valley, and the Carolinas and eastern Georgia.9 Beyond this region of continuous settlement were the small settled areas of Kentucky and Tennessee, and the Ohio, with the mountains intervening between them and the Atlantic area, thus giving a new and important character to the frontier. The isolation of the region increased its peculiarly American tendencies, and the need of transportation facilities to connect it with the East called out important schemes of internal improvement, which will be noted farther on. The “West,” as a self-conscious section, began to evolve.
[7] From decade to decade distinct advances of the frontier occurred. By the census of 182010 the settled area included Ohio, southern Indiana and Illinois, southeastern Missouri, and about one-half of Louisiana. This settled area had surrounded Indian areas, and the management of these tribes became an object of political concern. The frontier region of the time lay along the Great Lakes, where Astor's American Fur Company operated in the Indian trade,11 and beyond the Mississippi, where Indian traders extended their activity even to the Rocky Mountains; Florida also furnished frontier conditions. The Mississippi River region was the scene of typical frontier settlements.12
[8] The rising steam navigation13 on western waters, the opening of the Erie Canal, and the westward extension of cotton14 culture added five frontier states to the Union in this period. Grund, writing in 1836, declares: “It appears then that the universal disposition of Americans to emigrate to the western wilderness, in order to enlarge their dominion over inanimate nature, is the actual result of an expansive power which is inherent in them, and which by continually agitating all classes of society is constantly throwing a large portion of the whole population on the extreme confines of the State, in order to gain space for its development. Hardly is a new State of Territory formed before the same principle manifests itself again and gives rise to a further emigration; and so is it destined to go on until a physical barrier must finally obstruct its progress.”15
[9] In the middle of this century the line indicated by the present eastern boundary of Indian Territory, Nebraska, and Kansas marked the frontier of the Indian country.16 Minnesota and Wisconsin still exhibited frontier conditions,17 but the distinctive frontier of the period is found in California, where the gold discoveries had sent a sudden tide of adventurous miners, and in Oregon, and the settlements in Utah. As the frontier had leaped over the Alleghanies, so now it skipped the Great Plains and the Rocky Mountains; and in the same way that the advance of the frontiersmen beyond the Alleghanies had caused the rise of important questions of transportation and internal improvement, so now the settlers beyond the Rocky Mountains needed means of communication with the East, and in the furnishing of these arose the settlement of the Great Plains and the development of still another kind of frontier life. Railroads, fostered by land grants, sent an increasing tide of immigrants into the Far West. The United States Army fought a series of Indian wars in Minnesota, Dakota, and the Indian Territory.
[10] By 1880 the settled area had been pushed into northern Michigan, Wisconsin, and Minnesota, along Dakota rivers, and in the Black Hills region, and was ascending the rivers of Kansas and Nebraska. The development of mines in Colorado had drawn isolated frontier settlements into that region, and Montana and Idaho were receiving settlers. The frontier was found in these mining camps and the ranches of the Great Plains. The superintendent of the census for 1890 reports, as previously stated, that the settlements of the West lie so scattered over the region that there can no longer be said to be a frontier line.
[11] In these successive frontiers we find natural boundary lines which have served to mark and to affect the characteristics of the frontiers, namely: the “fall line;” the Alleghany Mountains; the Mississippi; the Missouri where its direction approximates north and south; the line of the arid lands, approximately the ninety-ninth meridian; and the Rocky Mountains. The fall line marked the frontier of the seventeenth century; the Alleghanies that of the eighteenth; the Mississippi that of the first quarter of the nineteenth; the Missouri that of the middle of this century (omitting the California movement); and the belt of the Rocky Mountains and the arid tract, the present frontier. Each was won by a series of Indian wars.
[12] At the Atlantic frontier one can study the germs of processes repeated at each successive frontier. We have the complex European life sharply precipitated by the wilderness into the simplicity of primitive conditions. The first frontier had to meet its Indian question, its question of the disposition of the public domain, of the means of intercourse with older settlements, of the extension of political organization, of religious and educational activity. And the settlement of these and similar questions for one frontier served as a guide for the next. The American student needs not to go to the “prim little townships of Sleswick” for illustrations of the law of continuity and development. For example, he may study the origin of our land policies in the colonial land policy; he may see how the system grew by adapting the statutes to the customs of the successive frontiers.19 He may see how the mining experience in the lead regions of Wisconsin, Illinois, and Iowa was applied to the mining laws of the Sierras,20 and how our Indian policy has been a series of experimentations on successive frontiers. Each tier of new States has found in the older ones material for its constitutions.21 Each frontier has made similar contributions to American character, as will be discussed farther on.
[13] But with all these similarities there are essential differences, due to the place element and the time element. It is evident that the farming frontier of the Mississippi Valley presents different conditions from the mining frontier of the Rocky Mountains. The frontier reached by the Pacific Railroad, surveyed into rectangles, guarded by the United States Army, and recruited by the daily immigrant ship, moves forward at a swifter pace and in a different way than the frontier reached by the birch canoe or the pack horse. The geologist traces patiently the shores of ancient seas, maps their areas, and compares the older and the newer. It would be a work worth the historian's labors to mark these various frontiers and in detail compare one with another. Not only would there result a more adequate conception of American development and characteristics, but invaluable additions would be made to the history of society.
[14] Loria,22 the Italian economist, has urged the study of colonial life as an aid in understanding the stages of European development, affirming that colonial settlement is for economic science what the mountain is for geology, bringing to light primitive stratifications. “America,” he says, “has the key to the historical enigma which Europe has sought for centuries in vain, and the land which has no history reveals luminously the course of universal history.” There is much truth in this. The United States lies like a huge page in the history of society. Line by line as we read this continental page from West to East we find the record of social evolution. It begins with the Indian and the hunter; it goes on to tell of the disintegration of savagery by the entrance of the trader, the pathfinder of civilization; we read the annals of the pastoral stage in ranch life; the exploitation of the soil by the raising of unrotated crops of corn and wheat in sparsely settled farming communities; the intensive culture of the denser farm settlement; and finally the manufacturing organization with city and factory system.23 This page is familiar to the student of census statistics, but how little of it has been used by our historians. Particularly in eastern States this page is a palimpsest. What is now a manufacturing State was in an earlier decade an area of intensive farming. Earlier yet it had been a wheat area, and still earlier the “range” had attracted the cattleherder. Thus Wisconsin, now developing manufacture, is a State with varied agricultural interests. But earlier it was given over to almost exclusive grain-raising, like North Dakota at the present time.
[15] Each of these areas has had an influence in our economic and political history; the evolution of each into a higher stage has worked political transformations. But what constitutional historian has made any adequate attempt to interpret political facts by the light of these social areas and changes?24
[16] The Atlantic frontier was compounded of fisherman, fur trader, miner, cattle-raiser, and farmer. Excepting the fisherman, each type of industry was on the march toward the West, impelled by an irresistible attraction. Each passed in successive waves across the continent. Stand at Cumberland Gap and watch the procession of civilization, marching single file — the buffalo following the trail to the salt springs, the Indian, the fur trader and hunter, the cattle-raiser, the pioneer farmer — and the frontier has passed by. Stand at South Pass in the Rockies a century later and see the same procession with wider intervals between. The unequal rate of advance compels us to distinguish the frontier into the trader's frontier, the rancher's frontier, or the miner's frontier, and the farmer's frontier. When the mines and the cow pens were still near the fall line the traders' pack trains were tinkling across the Alleghanies, and the French on the Great Lakes were fortifying their posts, alarmed by the British trader's birch canoe. When the trappers scaled the Rockies, the farmer was still near the mouth of the Missouri.
[17] Why was it that the Indian trader passed so rapidly across the continent? What effects followed from the trader's frontier? The trade was coeval with American discovery. The Norsemen, Vespuccius, Verrazani, Hudson, John Smith, all trafficked for furs. The Plymouth pilgrims settled in Indian cornfields, and their first return cargo was of beaver and lumber. The records of the various New England colonies show how steadily exploration was carried into the wilderness by this trade. What is true for New England is, as would be expected, even plainer for the rest of the colonies. All along the coast from Maine to Georgia the Indian trade opened up the river courses. Steadily the trader passed westward, utilizing the older lines of French trade. The Ohio, the Great Lakes, the Mississippi, the Missouri, and the Platte, the lines of western advance, were ascended by traders. They found the passes in the Rocky Mountains and guided Lewis and Clark,25 Fremont, and Bidwell. The explanation of the rapidity of this advance is connected with the effects of the trader on the Indian. The trading post left the unarmed tribes at the mercy of those that had purchased fire-arms — a truth which the Iroquois Indians wrote in blood, and so the remote and unvisited tribes gave eager welcome to the trader “The savages,” wrote La Salle, “take better care of us French than of their own children; from us only can they get guns and goods.” This accounts for the trader's power and the rapidity of his advance. Thus the disintegrating forces of civilization entered the wilderness. Every river valley and Indian trail became a fissure in Indian society, and so that society became honeycombed. Long before the pioneer farmer appeared on the scene, primitive Indian life had passed away. The farmers met Indians armed with guns. The trading frontier, while steadily undermining Indian power by making the tribes ultimately dependent on the whites, yet, through its sale of guns, gave to the Indian increased power of resistance to the farming frontier. French colonization was dominated by its trading frontier; English colonization by its farming frontier. There was an antagonism between the two frontiers as between the two nations. Said Duquesne to the Iroquois, “Are you ignorant of the difference between the king of England and the king of France? Go see the forts that our king has established and you will see that you can still hunt under their very walls. They have been placed for your advantage in places which you frequent. The English, on the contrary, are no sooner in possession of a place than the game is driven away. The forest falls before them as they advance, and the soil is laid bare so that you can scarce find the wherewithal to erect a shelter for the night.”
[18] And yet, in spite of this opposition of the interests of the trader and the farmer, the Indian trade pioneered the way for civilization. The buffalo trail became the Indian trail, and this became the trader's “trace;” the trails widened into roads, and the roads into turnpikes, and these in turn were transformed into railroads. The same origin can be shown for the railroads of the South, the Far West, and the Dominion of Canada.26 The trading posts reached by these trails were on the sites of Indian villages which had been placed in positions suggested by nature; and these trading posts, situated so as to command the water systems of the country, have grown into such cities as Albany, Pittsburgh, Detroit, Chicago, St. Louis, Council Bluffs, and Kansas City. Thus civilization in America has followed the arteries made by geology, pouring an ever richer tide through them, until at last the slender paths of aboriginal intercourse have been broadened and interwoven into the complex mazes of modern commercial lines; the wilderness has been interpenetrated by lines of civilization growing ever more numerous. It is like the steady growth of a complex nervous system for the originally simple, inert continent. If one would understand why we are to-day one nation, rather than a collection of isolated states, he must study this economic and social consolidation of the country. In this progress from savage conditions lie topics for the evolutionist.27
[19] The effect of the Indian frontier as a consolidating agent in our history is important. From the close of the seventeenth century various intercolonial congresses have been called to treat with Indians and establish common measures of defense. Particularism was strongest in colonies with no Indian frontier. This frontier stretched along the western border like a cord of union. The Indian was a common danger, demanding united action. Most celebrated of these conferences was the Albany congress of 1754, called to treat with the Six Nations, and to consider plans of union. Even a cursory reading of the plan proposed by the congress reveals the importance of the frontier. The powers of the general council and the officers were, chiefly, the determination of peace and war with the Indians, the regulation of Indian trade, the purchase of Indian lands, and the creation and government of new settlements as a security against the Indians. It is evident that the unifying tendencies of the Revolutionary period were facilitated by the previous coöperation in the regulation of the frontier. In this connection may be mentioned the importance of the frontier, from that day to this, as a military training school, keeping alive the power of resistance to aggression, and developing the stalwart and rugged qualities of the frontiersman.
[20] It would not be possible in the limits of this paper to trace the other frontiers across the continent. Travelers of the eighteenth century found the “cowpens” among the canebrakes and peavine pastures of the South, and the “cow drivers” took their droves to Charleston, Philadelphia, and New York.28 Travelers at the close of the War of 1812 met droves of more than a thousand cattle and swine from the interior of Ohio going to Pennsylvania to fatten for the Philadelphia market.29 The ranges of the Great Plains, with ranch and cowboy and nomadic life, are things of yesterday and of to-day. The experience of the Carolina cowpens guided the ranchers of Texas. One element favoring the rapid extension of the rancher's frontier is the fact that in a remote country lacking transportation facilities the product must be in small bulk, or must be able to transport itself, and the cattle raiser could easily drive his product to market. The effect of these great ranches on the subsequent agrarian history of the localities in which they existed should be studied.
[21] The maps of the census reports show an uneven advance of the farmer's frontier, with tongues of settlement pushed forward and with indentations of wilderness. In part this is due to Indian resistance, in part to the location of river valleys and passes, in part to the unequal force of the centers of frontier attraction. Among the important centers of attraction may be mentioned the following: fertile and favorably situated soils, salt springs, mines, and army posts.
[22] The frontier army post, serving to protect the settlers from the Indians, has also acted as a wedge to open the Indian country, and has been a nucleus for settlement.30 In this connection mention should also be made of the government military and exploring expeditions in determining the lines of settlement. But all the more important expeditions were greatly indebted to the earliest pathmakers, the Indian guides, the traders and trappers, and the French voyageurs, who were inevitable parts of governmental expeditions from the days of Lewis and Clark.31 Each expedition was an epitome of the previous factors in western advance.
[23] In an interesting monograph, Victor Hehn32 has traced the effect of salt upon early European development, and has pointed out how it affected the lines of settlement and the form of administration. A similar study might be made for the salt springs of the United States. The early settlers were tied to the coast by the need of salt, without which they could not preserve their meats or live in comfort. Writing in 1752, Bishop Spangenburg says of a colony for which he was seeking lands in North Carolina, “They will require salt & other necessaries which they can neither manufacture nor raise. Either they must go to Charleston, which is 300 miles distant . . . Or else they must go to Boling's Point in Va on a branch of the James & is also 300 miles from here . . . Or else they must go down the Roanoke — I know not how many miles — where salt is brought up from the Cape Fear.”33 This may serve as a typical illustration. An annual pilgrimage to the coast for salt thus became essential. Taking flocks or furs and ginseng root, the early settlers sent their pack trains after seeding time each year to the coast.34 This proved to be an important educational influence, since it was almost the only way in which the pioneer learned what was going on in the East. But when discovery was made of the salt springs of the Kanawha, and the Holston, and Kentucky, and central New York, the West began to be freed from dependence on the coast. It was in part the effect of finding these salt springs that enabled settlement to cross the mountains.
[24] From the time the mountains rose between the pioneer and the seaboard, a new order of Americanism arose. The West and the East began to get out of touch of each other. The settlements from the sea to the mountains kept connection with the rear and had a certain solidarity. But the over-mountain men grew more and more independent. The East took a narrow view of American advance, and nearly lost these men. Kentucky and Tennessee history bears abundant witness to the truth of this statement. The East began to try to hedge and limit westward expansion. Though Webster could declare that there were no Alleghanies in his politics, yet in politics in general they were a very solid factor.
[25] The exploitation of the beasts took hunter and trader
to the west, the exploitation of the grasses took the rancher
west, and the exploitation of the virgin soil of the river
valleys and prairies attracted the farmer. Good soils have been
the most continuous attraction to the farmer's frontier. The land
hunger of the Virginians drew them down the rivers into Carolina,
in early colonial days; the search for soils took the
Massachusetts men to Pennsylvania and to New York. As the eastern
lands were taken up migration flowed across them to the west.
Daniel Boone, the great backwoodsman, who combined the
occupations of hunter, trader, cattle-raiser, farmer, and
surveyor-learning, probably from the traders, of the fertility of
the lands of the upper Yadkin, where the traders were wont to
rest as they took their way to the Indians, left his Pennsylvania
home with his father, and passed down the Great Valley road to
that stream. Learning from a trader of the game and rich pastures
of Kentucky, he pioneered the way for the farmers to that region.
Thence he passed to the frontier of Missouri, where his
settlement was long a landmark on the frontier. Here again he
helped to open the way for civilization, finding salt licks, and
trails, and land. His son was among the earliest trappers in the
passes of the Rocky Mountains, and his party are said to have
been the first to camp on the present site of Denver. His
grandson, Col. A. J. Boone, of Colorado, was a power among the
Indians of the Rocky Mountains, and was appointed an agent by the
government. Kit Carson's mother was a
Boone.
[26] The farmer's advance came in a distinct series of
waves. In Peck's New Guide to the West, published in Boston in
1837, occurs this suggestive passage:
The next class of emigrants purchase the lands, add field to
field, clear out the roads, throw rough bridges over the streams,
put up hewn log houses with glass windows and brick or stone
chimneys, occasionally plant orchards, build mills,
school-houses, court-houses, etc., and exhibit the picture and
forms of plain, frugal, civilized life.
Another wave rolls on. The men of capital and enterprise come.
The settler is ready to sell out and take the advantage of the
rise in property, push farther into the interior and become,
himself, a man of capital and enterprise in turn. The small
village rises to a spacious town or city; substantial edifices of
brick, extensive fields, orchards, gardens, colleges, and
churches are seen. Broad-cloths, silks, leghorns, crepes, and all
the refinements, luxuries, elegancies, frivolities, and fashions
are in vogue. Thus wave after wave is rolling westward; the real
Eldorado is still farther on.
A portion of the two first classes remain stationary amidst the
general movement, improve their habits and condition, and rise in
the scale of society.
The writer has traveled much amongst the first class, the real
pioneers. He has lived many years in connection with the second
grade; and now the third wave is sweeping over large districts of
Indiana, Illinois, and Missouri. Migration has become almost a
habit in the West. Hundreds of men can be found, not over 50
years of age, who have settled for the fourth, fifth, or sixth
time on a new spot. To sell out and remove only a few hundred
miles makes up a portion of the variety of backwoods life and
manners.36
[28] Having now roughly outlined the various kinds of
frontiers, and their modes of advance, chiefly from the point of
view of the frontier itself, we may next inquire what were the
influences on the East and on the Old World. A rapid enumeration
of some of the more noteworthy effects is all that I have time
for.
[29] First, we note that the frontier promoted the
formation of a composite nationality for the American people. The
coast was preponderantly English, but the later tides of
continental immigration flowed across to the free lands. This was
the case from the early colonial days. The Scotch-Irish and the
Palatine Germans, or “Pennsylvania Dutch,” furnished the dominant
element in the stock of the colonial frontier. With these peoples
were also the freed indented servants, or redemptioners, who at
the expiration of their time of service passed to the frontier.
Governor Spotswood of Virginia writes in 1717, “The inhabitants
of our frontiers are composed generally of such as have been
transported hither as servants, and, being out of their time,
settle themselves where land is to be taken up and that will
produce the necessarys of life with little labour.” 37 Very generally these redemptioners were of
non-English stock. In the crucible of the frontier the immigrants
were Americanized, liberated, and fused into a mixed race,
English in neither nationality nor characteristics. The process
has gone on from the early days to our own. Burke and other
writers in the middle of the eighteenth century believed that
Pennsylvania38 was “threatened with the danger of
being wholly foreign in language, manners, and perhaps even
inclinations.” The German and Scotch-Irish elements in the
frontier of the South were only less great. In the middle of the
present century the German element in Wisconsin was already so
considerable that leading publicists looked to the creation of a
German state out of the commonwealth by concentrating their
colonization.39 Such examples teach us to beware of
misinterpreting the fact that there is a common English speech in
America into a belief that the stock is also English.
[30] In another way the advance of the frontier decreased
our dependence on England. The coast, particularly of the South,
lacked diversified industries, and was dependent on England for
the bulk of its supplies. In the South there was even a
dependence on the Northern colonies for articles of food.
Governor Glenn, of South Carolina, writes in the middle of the
eighteenth century: “Our trade with New York and Philadelphia was
of this sort, draining us of all the little money and bills we
could gather from other places for their bread, flour, beer,
hams, bacon, and other things of their produce, all which, except
beer, our new townships begin to supply us with, which are
settled with very industrious and thriving Germans. This no doubt
diminishes the number of shipping and the appearance of our
trade, but it is far from being a detriment to us.40 Before long
the frontier created a demand for merchants. As it retreated from
the coast it became less and less possible for England to bring
her supplies directly to the consumer's wharfs, and carry away
staple crops, and staple crops began to give way to diversified
agriculture for a time. The effect of this phase of the frontier
action upon the northern section is perceived when we realize how
the advance of the frontier aroused seaboard cities like Boston,
New York, and Baltimore, to engage in rivalry for what Washington
called “the extensive and valuable trade of a rising empire.”
[31] The legislation which most developed the powers of
the national government, and played the largest part in its
activity, was conditioned on the frontier. Writers have
discussed; the subjects of tariff, land, and internal
improvement, as subsidiary to the slavery question. But when
American history comes to be rightly viewed it will be seen that
the slavery question is an incident. In the period from the end
of the first half of the present century to the close of the
Civil War slavery rose to primary, but far from exclusive,
importance. But this does not justify Dr. von Holst (to take an
example) in treating our constitutional history in its formative
period down to 1828 in a single volume, giving six volumes
chiefly to the history of slavery from 1828 to 1861, under the
title “Constitutional History of the United States.” The growth
of nationalism and the evolution of American political
institutions were dependent on the advance of the frontier. Even
so recent a writer as Rhodes, in his “History of the United
States since the Compromise of 1850,” has treated the legislation
called out by the western advance as incidental to the slavery
struggle.
[32] This is a wrong perspective. The pioneer needed the
goods of the coast, and so the grand series of internal
improvement and railroad legislation began, with potent
nationalizing effects. Over internal improvements occurred great
debates, in which grave constitutional questions were discussed.
Sectional groupings appear in the votes, profoundly significant
for the historian. Loose construction increased as the nation
marched westward41 But the West was not content with
bringing the farm to the factory. Under the lead of Clay —
“Harry of the West” — protective tariffs were passed, with
the cry of bringing the factory to the farm. The disposition of
the public lands was a third important subject of national
legislation influenced by the frontier.
[33] The public domain has been a force of profound
importance in the nationalization and development of the
government. The effects of the struggle of the landed and the
landless States, and of the Ordinance of 1787, need no
discussion.42
Administratively the frontier called out some of the highest and
most vitalizing activities of the general government. The
purchase of Louisiana was perhaps the constitutional turning
point in the history of the Republic, inasmuch as it afforded
both a new area for national legislation and the occasion of the
downfall of the policy of strict construction. But the purchase
of Louisiana was called out by frontier needs and demands. As
frontier States accrued to the Union the national power grew In a
speech on the dedication of the Calhoun monument Mr. Lamar
explained: “In 1789 the States were the creators of the Federal
Government; in 1861 the Federal Government was the creator of a
large majority of the States.”
[34] When we consider the public domain from the point of
view of the sale and disposal of the public lands we are again
brought face to face with the frontier. The policy of the United
States in dealing with its lands is in sharp contrast with the
European system of scientific administration. Efforts to make
this domain a source of revenue, and to withhold it from
emigrants in order that settlement might be compact, were in
vain. The jealousy and the fears of the East were powerless in
the face of the demands of the frontiersmen. John Quincy Adams
was obliged to confess: “My own system of administration, which
was to make the national domain the inexhaustible fund for
progressive and unceasing internal improvement, has failed.” The
reason is obvious; a system of administration was not what the
West demanded; it wanted land. Adams states the situation as
follows: “The slaveholders of the South have bought the
coöperation of the western country by the bribe of the
western lands, abandoning to the new Western States their own
proportion of the public property and aiding them in the design
of grasping all the lands into their own hands. Thomas H. Benton
was the author of this system, which he brought forward as a
substitute for the American system of Mr. Clay, and to supplant
him as the leading statesman of the West. Mr. Clay, by his tariff
compromise with Mr. Calhoun, abandoned his own American system.
At the same time he brought forward a plan for distributing among
all the States of the Union the proceeds of the sales of the
public lands. His bill for that purpose passed both Houses of
Congress, but was vetoed by President Jackson, who, in his annual
message of December, 1832, formally recommended that all public
lands should be gratuitously given away to individual adventurers
and to the States in which the lands are situated.43
[35] “No subject,” said Henry Clay, “which has presented
itself to the present, or perhaps any preceding, Congress, is of
greater magnitude than that of the public lands.” When we
consider the far-reaching effects of the government's land policy
upon political, economic, and social aspects of American life, we
are disposed to agree with him. But this legislation was framed
under frontier influences, and under the lead of Western
statesmen like Benton and Jackson. Said Senator Scott of Indiana
in 1841: “I consider the preemption law merely declaratory of the
custom or common law of the settlers.”
[36] It is safe to say that the legislation with regard to
land, tariff, and internal improvements-the American system of
the nationalizing Whig party — was conditioned on frontier
ideas and needs. But it was not merely in legislative action that
the frontier worked against the sectionalism of the coast. The
economic and social characteristics of the frontier worked
against sectionalism. The men of the frontier had closer
resemblances to the Middle region than to either of the other
sections. Pennsylvania had been the seed plot of frontier
emigration, and, although she passed on her settlers along the
Great Valley into the west of Virginia and the Carolinas, yet the
industrial society of these Southern frontiersmen was always more
like that of the Middle region than like that of the tide water
portion of the South, which later came to spread its industrial
type throughout the South. The Middle region, entered by New York
harbor, was an open door to all Europe. The tide-water part of
the South represented typical Englishmen, modified by a warm
climate and servile labor, and living in baronial fashion on
great plantations; New England stood for a special English
movement — Puritanism. The Middle region was less English
than the other sections. It had a wide mixture of nationalities,
a varied society, the mixed town and county system of local
government, a varied economic life, many religious sects. In
short, it was a region mediating between New England and the
South, and the East and the West. It represented that composite
nationality which the contemporary United States exhibits, that
juxtaposition of non-English groups, occupying a valley or a
little settlement, and presenting reflections of the map of
Europe in their variety. It was democratic and nonsectional, if
not national; “easy, tolerant, and contented;” rooted strongly in
material prosperity. It was typical of the modern United States.
It was least sectional, not only because it lay between North and
South, but also because with no barriers to shut out its
frontiers from its settled region, and with a system of
connecting waterways, the Middle region mediated between East and
West as well as between North and South. Thus it became the
typically American region. Even the New Englander, who was shut
out from the frontier by the Middle region, tarrying in New York
or Pennsylvania on his west. ward march, lost the acuteness of
his sectionalism on the way.44
[37] The spread of cotton culture into the interior of the
South finally broke down the contrast between the “tide-water”
region and the rest of the State, and based Southern interests on
slavery. Before this process revealed its results the western
portion of the South, which was akin to Pennsylvania in stock,
society, and industry, showed tendencies to fall away from the
faith of the fathers into internal improvement legislation and
nationalism. In the Virginia convention of 1829-30, called to
revise the constitution, Mr. Leigh, of Chesterfield, one of the
tide-water counties, declared:
[39] But the most important effect of the frontier has
been in the promotion of democracy here and in Europe. As has
been indicated, the frontier is productive of individualism.
Complex society is precipitated by the wilderness into a kind of
primitive organization based on the family. The tendency is
anti-social. It produces antipathy to control, and particularly
to any direct control. The tax-gatherer is viewed as a
representative of oppression. Prof. Osgood, in an able article,46 has pointed
out that the frontier conditions prevalent in the colonies are
important factors in the explanation of the American Revolution,
where individual liberty was sometimes confused with absence of
all effective government. The same conditions aid in explaining
the difficulty of instituting a strong government in the period
of the confederacy. The frontier individualism has from the
beginning promoted democracy. The frontier States that came into
the Union in the first quarter of a century of its existence came
in with democratic suffrage provisions, and had reactive effects
of the highest importance upon the older States whose peoples
were being attracted there. An extension of the franchise became
essential. It was western New York that forced an
extension of suffrage in the constitutional convention of that
State in 1821; and it was western Virginia that compelled
the tide-water region to put a more liberal suffrage provision in
the constitution framed in 1830, and to give to the frontier
region a more nearly proportionate representation with the
tide-water aristocracy. The rise of democracy as an effective
force in the nation came in with western preponderance under
Jackson and William Henry Harrison, and it meant the triumph of
the frontier — with all of its good and with all of its
evil elements.47 An interesting illustration of the
tone of frontier democracy in 1830 comes from the same debates in
the Virginia convention already referred to. A representative
from western Virginia declared:
[41] The East has always feared the result of an
unregulated advance of the frontier, and has tried to check and
guide it. The English authorities would have checked settlement
at the headwaters of the Atlantic tributaries and allowed the
“savages to enjoy their deserts in quiet lest the peltry trade
should decrease.” This called out Burke's splendid protest:
[43] The most effective efforts of the East to regulate
the frontier came through its educational and religious activity,
exerted by interstate migration and by organized societies.
Speaking in 1835, Dr. Lyman Beecher declared: “It is equally
plain that the religious and political destiny of our nation is
to be decided in the West,” and he pointed out that the
population of the West “is assembled from all the States of the
Union and from all the nations of Europe, and is rushing in like
the waters of the flood, demanding for its moral preservation the
immediate and universal action of those institutions which
discipline the mind and arm the conscience and the heart. And so
various are the opinions and habits, and so recent and imperfect
is the acquaintance, and so sparse are the settlements of the
West, that no homogeneous public sentiment can be formed to
legislate immediately into being the requisite institutions. And
yet they are all needed immediately in their utmost perfection
and power. A nation is being 'born in a day.' . . . But
what will become of the West if her prosperity rushes up to such
a majesty of power, while those great institutions linger which
are necessary to form the mind and the conscience and the heart
of that vast world. It must not be permitted. . . . Let
no man at the East quiet himself and dream of liberty, whatever
may become of the West. . . . Her destiny is our
destiny.” 53
[44] With the appeal to the conscience of New England, he
adds appeals to her fears lest other religious sects anticipate
her own. The New England preacher and school-teacher left their
mark on the West. The dread of Western emancipation from New
England's political and economic control was paralleled by her
fears lest the West cut loose from her religion. Commenting in
1850 on reports that settlement was rapidly extending northward
in Wisconsin, the editor of the Home Missionary writes:
“We scarcely know whether to rejoice or mourn over this extension
of our settlements. While we sympathize in whatever tends to
increase the physical resources and prosperity of our country, we
can not forget that with all these dispersions into remote and
still remoter corners of the land the supply of the means of
grace is becoming relatively less and less.” Acting in accordance
with such ideas, home missions were established and Western
colleges were erected. As seaboard cities like Philadelphia, New
York, and Baltimore strove for the mastery of Western trade, so
the various denominations strove for the possession of the West.
Thus an intellectual stream from New England sources fertilized
the West. Other sections sent their missionaries; but the real
struggle was between sects. The contest for power and the
expansive tendency furnished to the various sects by the
existence of a moving frontier must have had important results on
the character of religious organization in the United States. The
multiplication of rival churches in the little frontier towns had
deep and lasting social effects. The religious aspects of the
frontier make a chapter in our history which needs study.
[45] From the conditions of frontier life came
intellectual traits of profound importance. The works of
travelers along each frontier from colonial days onward describe
certain common traits, and these traits have, while softening
down, still persisted as survivals in the place of their origin,
even when a higher social organization succeeded. The result is
that to the frontier the American intellect owes its striking
characteristics. That coarseness and strength combined with
acuteness and inquisitiveness; that practical, inventive turn of
mind, quick to find expedients; that masterful grasp of material
things, lacking in the artistic but powerful to effect great
ends; that restless, nervous energy;54 that dominant individualism,
working for good and for evil, and withal that buoyancy and
exuberance which comes with freedom-these are traits of the
frontier, or traits called out elsewhere because of the existence
of the frontier. Since the days when the fleet of Columbus sailed
into the waters of the New World, America has been another name
for opportunity, and the people of the United States have taken
their tone from the incessant expansion which has not only been
open but has even been forced upon them. He would be a rash
prophet who should assert that the expansive character of
American life has now entirely ceased. Movement has been its
dominant fact, and, unless this training has no effect upon a
people, the American energy will continually demand a wider field
for its exercise. But never again will such gifts of free land
offer themselves. For a moment, at the frontier, the bonds of
custom are broken and unrestraint is triumphant. There is not
tabula rasa. The stubborn American environment is there
with its imperious summons to accept its conditions; the
inherited ways of doing things are also there; and yet, in spite
of environment, and in spite of custom, each frontier did indeed
furnish a new field of opportunity, a gate of escape from the
bondage of the past; and freshness, and confidence, and scorn of
older society, impatience of its restraints and its ideas, and
indifference to its lessons, have accompanied the frontier. What
the Mediterranean Sea was to the Greeks, breaking the bond of
custom, offering new experiences, calling out new institutions
and activities, that, and more, the ever retreating frontier has
been to the United States directly, and to the nations of Europe
more remotely. And now, four centuries from the discovery of
America, at the end of a hundred years of life under the
Constitution, the frontier has gone, and with its going has
closed the first period of American history.
2. “Abridgment of Debates of Congress,” v, p.
706.
3. Bancroft (1860 ed.), iii, pp. 344, 345, citing
Logan MSS.; [Mitchell] “Contest in America,” etc. (1752), p.
237.
4. Kercheval, “History of the Valley”; Bernheim,
“German Settlements in the Carolinas”; Winsor, “Narrative and
Critical History of America,” v, p. 304; Colonial Records of
North Carolina, iv, p. xx; Weston, “Documents Connected with the
History of South Carolina,” p. 82; Ellis and Evans, “History of
Lancaster County, Pa.,” chs. iii, xxvi.
5. Parkman, “Pontiac,” ii; Griffis, “Sir William
Johnson,” p. 6; Simms's “Frontiersmen of New York.”
6. Monette, “Mississippi Valley,” i, p. 311.
7. Wis. Hist. Cols., xi, p. 50; Hinsdale, “Old
Northwest,” p. 121; Burke, “Oration on Conciliation,” Works (1872
ed.), i, p. 473.
8. Roosevelt, “Winning of the West,” and
citations there given, Cutler's “Life of Cutler.”
9. Scribner's Statistical Atlas, xxxviii, pl. 13;
McMaster, “Hist. of People of U. S.,” i, pp. 4, 60, 61; Imlay and
Filson, “Western Territory of America” (London, 1793);
Rochefoucault-Liancourt, “Travels Through the United States of
North America” (London, 1799); Michaux's “Journal,” in
Proceedings American Philosophical Society, xxvi, No. 129;
Forman, “Narrative of a Journey Down the Ohio and Mississippi in
1780-'90” (Cincinnati, 1888); Bartram, “Travels Through North
Carolina,” etc. (London, 1792); Pope, “Tour Through the Southern
and Western Territories,” etc. (Richmond, 1792); Weld; “Travels
Through the States of North America” (London, 1799); Baily,
“Journal of aTour in the Unsettled States of North America,
1796-'97” (London, 1856); Pennsylvania Magazine of History, July,
1886; Winsor, “Narrative and Critical History of America,” vii,
pp. 491, 492, citations.
10. Scribner's Statistical Atlas, xxxix.
11. Turner, “Character and Influence of the
Indian Trade in Wisconsin” (Johns Hopkins University Studies,
Series ix), pp. 61ff.
12. Monette, “History of the Mississippi
Valley,” ii; Flint, “Travels and Residence in Mississippi,”
Flint, “Geography and History of the Western States,” “Abridgment
of Debates of Congress,” vii, pp. 397 398, 404; Holmes, “Account
of the U. S.”; Kingdom, “America and the British Colonies”
(London, 1820); Grund, “Americans,” ii, chs. i, iii, vi (although
writing in 1836, he treats of conditions that grew out of western
advance from the era of 1820 to that time) Peck, “Guide for
Emigrants” (Boston, 1831); Darby, “Emigrants' Guide to Western
and Southwestern States and Territories”; Dana, “Geographical
Sketches in the Western Country”; Kinzie, “Waubun”; Keating,
“Narrative of Long's Expedition”; Schoolcraft, “Discovery of the
Sources of the Mississippi River,” “Travels in the Central
Portions of the Mississippi Valley.” and “Lead Mines of the
Missouri”; Andreas, “History of Illinois,” i, 86-99; Hurlbut,
“Chicago Antiquities”; McKenney, “Tour to the Lakes”; Thomas
“Travels Through the Western Country,” etc. (Auburn, N. Y.,
1819),
13. Darby, “Emigrants' Guide,” pp. 272 ff;
Benton, “Abridgment of Debates,” vii, p. 397.
14. De Bow's Review, iv, p. 254; xvii, p.
428.
15. Grund. “Americans.” ii, p. 8.
16. Peck, “New Guide to the West” (Cincinnati,
1848), ch. iv; Parkman, “Oregon Trail”; Hall, “The West”
(Cincinnati, 1848); Pierce, “Incidents of Western Travel”;
Murray, “Travels in Norrh America”; Lloyd, “Steamboat Directory”
(Cincinnati, 1856); “Forty Days in a Western Hotel", (Chicago),
in Putnam's Magazine, December, 1894; Mackay, “The Western
World,” ii, ch. ii, iii; Meeker, “Life in the West”; Bogen,
“German in America” (Boston, 1851); Olmstead, “Texas Journey",
Greeley, “Recollections of a Busy Life”; Schouler, “History of
the United States” v, 261-267; Peyton, “Over the Alleghanies and
Across the Prairies” (London, 1870); Loughborough, “The Pacific
Telegraph and Railway” (St. Louis, 1849); Whitney, “Project for a
Railroad to the Pacific” (New York, 1849); Peyton, “Suggestions
on Railroad Communication with the Pacific, and the Trade of
China and the Indian Islands”; Benton, “Highway to the Pacific,”
(a speech delivered in the U. S. Senate, December 36, 1850).
17. A writer in The Home Missionary
(1850), p. 239, reporting Wisconsin conditions, exclaims: “Think
of this, people of the enlightened East. What an example, to come
from the very frontier of civilization!” But one of the
missionaries writes: “In a few years Wisconsin will no longer be
considered as the West, or as an outpost of civilization, any
more than Western New York, or the Western Reserve.”
18. Bancroft (H. H.), “History of California,
History of Oregon, and Popular Tribunals”; Shinn, “Mining
Camps.”
19. See the suggestive paper by Prof. Jesse
Macy, “The Institutional Beginnings of a Western State.”
20. Shinn, “Mining Camps.”
21. Compare Thorpe, in Annals American
Academy of Political and Social Science, September, 1891;
Bryce, “American Commonwealth,” (1888), ii, p. 689.
22. Loria, Analisi della Proprieta Capitalista,
ii, p. 15.
23. Compare “Observations on the North American
Land Company,” London, 1796, pp. xv, 144; Logan, “History of
Upper South Carolina,” i, pp. 149-151; Turner, “Character and
Influence of Indian Trade in Wisconsin,” p. 18; Peck, “New Guide
for Emigrants” (Boston, 1837), ch. iv; “Compendium Eleventh
Census,” i, p. xl.
24. See post, for illustrations of the
political accompaniments of changed industrial conditions.
25. But Lewis and Clark were the first to
explore the route from the Missouri to the Columbia.
26. “Narrative and Critical History of America,”
viii, p. 10; Sparks' “Washington Works,” ix, pp. 303, 327; Logan,
” History of Upper South Carolina,” i; McDonald, “Life of
Kenton,” p. 72; Cong. Record, xxiii, p. 57.
27. On the effect of the fur trade in opening
the routes of migration see the author's “Character and Influence
of the Indian Trade in Wisconsin.”
28. Lodge, “English Colonies,” p. 152 and
citations; Logan, “Hist. of Upper South Carolina,” i, p. 151.
29. Flint, “Recollections,” p. 9.
30. See Monette, “Mississippi Valley,” i, p.
344.
31. Coues', “Lewis and Clark's Expedition,” i,
pp. 2, 253-259, Benton in Cong. Record, xxiii, p. 57.
32. Hehn, Das Salz (Berlin, 1873).
33. Col. Records of N. C., v, p. 3.
34. Findley, “History of the Insurrection in the
Four Western Counties of Pennsylvania in the Year 1794”
(Philadelphia, 1796), p. 35.
35. Hale, “Daniel Boone” (pamphlet).
36. Compare Baily, “Tour in the Unsettled Parts
of North America” (London, 1856), pp. 217-219, where a similar
analysis is made for 1796 See also Collot, “Journey in North
America” (Paris, 1826), p. 109 “Observations on the North
American Land Company” (London, 1796), pp. xv, 144; Logan,
“History of Upper South Carolina.”
37. “Spotswood Papers,” in Collections of
Virginia Historical Society, i, ii.
38. [Burke], “European Settlements” (1765 ed.),
ii p. 200.
39. Everest, in “Wisconsin Historical
Collections,” xii, pp. 7 ff.
40. Weston, “Documents connected with History of
South Carolina, p. 61.
41. See for example, the speech of Clay, in the
House of Representatives, January 30, 1824.
42. See the admirable monograph by Prof. H. B.
Adams, “Maryland's influence on the Land Cessions”; and also
President Welling, in Papers American Historical Association,
iii, p. 411.
43. Adams' Memoirs, ix, pp. 247, 248.
44. Author's article in The Ægis
(Madison, Wis.), November 4, 1892.
45. Compare Roosevelt, “Thomas Benton,” ch.
i.
46. Political Science Quarterly, ii, p.
457. Compare Sumner, “Alexander Hamilton,” chs. ii-vii.
47. Compare Wilson, “Division and Reunion,” pp.
15, 24.
48. On the relation of frontier conditions to
Revolutionary taxation, see Sumner, Alexander Hamilton, ch.
iii.
49. I have refrained from dwelling on the
lawless characteristics of the frontier, because they are
sufficiently well known. The gambler and desperado, the
regulators of the Carolinas and the vigilantes of California are
types of that line of scum that the waves of advancing
civilization bore before them, and of the growth of spontaneous
organs of authority where legal authority was absent. Compare
Barrows, “United States of Yesterday and To-morrow”; Shinn,
“Mining Camps”; and Bancroft, “Popular Tribunals.” The humor,
bravery, and rude strength, as well as the vices of the frontier
in its worst aspect, have left traces on American character,
language, and literature, not soon to be effaced.
50. Debates in the Constitutional Convention,
1829-1830.
51. [McCrady] Eminent and Representative Men of
the Carolinas, i, p. 43; Calhoun's Works, i, pp. 401-406.
52. Speech in the Senate, March 1, 1825;
Register of Debates. i, 721.
53. Plea for the West (Cincinnati, 1835), pp. 11
ff.
54. Colonial travelers agree in remarking on the
phlegmatic characteristics of the colonists. It has frequently
been asked how such a people could have developed that strained
nervous energy now characteristic of them. Compare Sumner,
“Alexander Hamilton,” p. 98, and Adams “History of the United
States,” i, p 60; ix, pp 240, 241. The transition appears to
become marked at the close of the War of 1812, a period when
interest centered upon the development of the West, and the West
was noted for restless energy. Grund, “Americans,” ii, ch. i.
Generally, in all the western settlements, three classes, like
the waves of the ocean, have rolled one after the other. First
comes the pioneer, who depends for the subsistence of his family
chiefly upon the natural growth of vegetation, called the
“range,” and the proceeds of hunting. His implements of
agriculture are rude, chiefly of his own make, and his efforts
directed mainly to a crop of corn and a “truck patch.” The last
is a rude garden for growing cabbage, beans, corn for roasting
ears, cucumbers, and potatoes. A log cabin, and, occasionally, a
stable and corn-crib, and a field of a dozen acres, the timber
girdled or “deadened,” and fenced, are enough for his occupancy.
It is quite immaterial whether he ever becomes the owner of the
soil. He is the occupant for the time being, pays no rent, and
feels as independent as the “lord of the manor.” With a horse,
cow, and one or two breeders of swine, he strikes into the woods
with his family, and becomes the founder of a new county, or
perhaps state. He builds his cabin, gathers around him a few
other families of similar tastes and habits, and occupies till
the range is somewhat subdued, and hunting a little precarious,
or, which is more frequently the case, till the neighbors crowd
around, roads, bridges, and fields annoy him, and he lacks elbow
room. The preëmption law enables him to dispose of his cabin
and cornfield to the next class of emigrants; and, to employ his
own figures, he “breaks for the high timber,” “clears out for the
New Purchase,” or migrates to Arkansas or Texas, to work the same
process over.
[27] Omitting those of the pioneer farmers who move from
the love of adventure, the advance of the more steady farmer is
easy to understand. Obviously the immigrant was attracted by the
cheap lands of the frontier, and even the native farmer felt
their influence strongly. Year by year the farmers who lived on
soil whose returns were diminished by unrotated crops were
offered the virgin soil of the frontier at nominal prices. Their
growing families demanded more lands, and these were dear. The
competition of the unexhausted, cheap, and easily tilled prairie
lands compelled the farmer either to go west and continue the
exhaustion of the soil on a new frontier, or to adopt intensive
culture. Thus the census of 1890 shows, in the Northwest, many
counties in which there is an absolute or a relative decrease of
population. These States have been sending farmers to advance the
frontier on the plains, and have themselves begun to turn to
intensive farming and to manufacture. A decade before this, Ohio
had shown the same transition stage. Thus the demand for land and
the love of wilderness freedom drew the frontier ever onward.
One of the main causes of discontent which led to this
convention, that which had the strongest influence in overcoming
our veneration for the work of our fathers, which taught us to
contemn the sentiments of Henry and Mason and Pendleton, which
weaned us from our reverence for the constituted authorities of
the State, was an overweening passion for internal improvement. I
say this with perfect knowledge, for it has been avowed to me by
gentlemen from the West over and over again. And let me tell the
gentleman from Albemarle (Mr. Gordon) that it has been another
principal object of those who set this ball of revolution in
motion, to overturn the doctrine of State rights, of which
Virginia has been the very pillar, and to remove the barrier she
has interposed to the interference of the Federal Government in
that same work of internal improvement, by so reorganizing the
legislature that Virginia, too, may be hitched to the Federal
car.
[38] It was this nationalizing tendency of the West that
transformed the democracy of Jefferson into the national
republicanism of Monroe and the democracy of Andrew Jackson. The
West of the War of 1812, the West of Clay, and Benton and
Harrison, and Andrew Jackson, shut off by the Middle States and
the mountains from the coast sections, had a solidarity of its
own with national tendencies.45 On the tide of the Father of
Waters, North and South met and mingled into a nation. Interstate
migration went steadily on — a process of
crossfertilization of ideas and institutions. The fierce struggle
of the sections over slavery on the western frontier does not
diminish the truth of this statement; it proves the truth of it.
Slavery was a sectional trait that would not down, but in the
West it could not remain sectional. It was the greatest of
frontiersmen who declared: “I believe this Government can not
endure permanently half slave and half free. It will become all
of one thing or all of the other.” Nothing works for nationalism
like intercourse within the nation. Mobility of population is
death to localism, and the western frontier worked irresistibly
in unsettling population. The effect reached back from the
frontier and affected profoundly the Atlantic coast and even the
Old World.
But, sir, it is not the increase of population in the West which
this gentleman ought to fear. It is the energy which the mountain
breeze and western habits impart to those emigrants. They are
regenerated, politically I mean, sir. They soon become working
politicians, and the difference, sir, between a
talking and a working politician is immense. The
Old Dominion has long been celebrated for producing great
orators; the ablest metaphysicians in policy; men that can split
hairs in all abstruse questions of political economy. But at
home, or when they return from Congress, they have negroes to fan
them asleep. But a Pennsylvania, a New York, an Ohio, or a
western Virginia statesman, though far inferior in logic,
metaphysics, and rhetoric to an old Virginia statesman, has this
advantage, that when he returns home he takes off his coat and
takes hold of the plow. This gives him bone and muscle, sir, and
preserves his republican principles pure and uncontaminated.
[40] So long as free land exists, the opportunity for a
competency exists, and economic power secures political power.
But the democracy born of free land, strong in selfishness and
individualism, intolerant of administrative experience and
education, and pressing individual liberty beyond its proper
bounds, has its dangers as well as its benefits. Individualism in
America has allowed a laxity in regard to governmental affairs
which has rendered possible the spoils system and all the
manifest evils that follow from the lack of a highly developed
civic spirit. In this connection may be noted also the influence
of frontier conditions in permitting lax business honor, inflated
paper currency and wild-cat banking. The colonial and
revolutionary frontier was the region whence emanated many of the
worst forms of an evil currency.48 The West in the War of 1812
repeated the phenomenon on the frontier of that day, while the
speculation and wild-cat banking of the period of the crisis of
1837 occurred on the new frontier belt of the next tier of
States. Thus each one of the periods of lax financial integrity
coincides with periods when a new set of frontier communities had
arisen, and coincides in area with these successive frontiers for
the most part. The recent Populist agitation is a case in point.
Many a State that now declines any connection with the tenets of
the Populists, itself adhered to such ideas in an earlier stage
of the development of the State. A primitive society can hardly
be expected to show the intelligent appreciation of the
complexity of business interests in a developed society. The
continual recurrence of these areas of paper-money agitation is
another evidence that the frontier can be isolated and studied as
a factor in American history of the highest importance.49
If you stopped your grants, what would be the consequence? The
people would occupy without grants. They have already so occupied
in many places. You can not station garrisons in every part of
these deserts. If you drive the people from one place, they will
carry on their annual tillage and remove with their flocks and
herds to another Many of the people in the back settlements are
already little attached to particular situations. Already they
have topped the Appalachian Mountains. From thence they behold
before them an immense plain, one vast, rich, level meadow; a
square of five hundred miles. Over this they would wander without
a possibility of restraint; they would change ,their manners with
their habits of life; would soon forget a government by which
they were disowned; would become hordes of English Tartars; and,
pouring down upon your unfortified frontiers a fierce and
irresistible cavalry, become masters of your governors and your
counselers, your collectors and comptrollers, and of all the
slaves that adhered to them. Such would, and in no long time
must, be the effect of attempting to forbid as a crime and to
suppress as an evil the command and blessing of Providence,
“Increase and multiply.” Such would be the happy result of an
endeavor to keep as a lair of wild beasts that earth which God,
by an express charter, has given to the children of men.
[42] But the English Government was not alone in its
desire to limit the advance of the frontier and guide its
destinies. Tidewater Virginia50 and South Carolina51
gerrymandering those colonies to insure the dominance of the
coast in their legislatures. Washington desired to settle a State
at a time in the Northwest; Jefferson would reserve form
settlement the territory of his Louisiana Purchase north of the
thirty-second parallel, in order to offer it to the Indians in
exchange for their settlements east of the Mississippi. “When we
shall be full on this side,” he writes, “we may lay off a range
of States on the western bank from the head to the mouth, and so
range after range, advancing compactly as we multiply.” Madison
went so far as to argue to the French minister that the United
States had no interest in seeing population extend itself on the
right bank of the Mississippi, but should rather fear it. When
the Oregon question was under debate, in 1824, Smyth, of
Virginia, would draw an unchangeable line for the limits of the
United States at the outer limit of two tiers of States beyond
the Mississippi, complaining that the seaboard States were being
drained of the flower of their population by the bringing of too
much land into market. Even Thomas Benton, the man of widest
views of the destiny of the West, at this stage of his career
declared that along the ridge of the Rocky mountains “the western
limits of the Republic should be drawn, and the statue of the
fabled god Terminus should be raised upon its highest peak, never
to be thrown down.”52 But the attempts to limit the
boundaries, to restrict land sales and settlement, and to deprive
the West of its share of political power were all in vain.
Steadily the frontier of settlement advanced and carried with it
individualism, democracy, and nationalism, and powerfully
affected the East and the Old World.
Notes
1. A paper read at the meeting of the American
Historical Association in Chicago, July 12, 1893. It first
appeared in the Proceedings of the State Historical Society of
Wisconsin, December 14, 1893, with the following note: “The
foundation of this paper is my article entitled 'Problems in
American History,' which appeared in The Ægis, a
publication of the students of the University of Wisconsin,
November 4, 1892 . . . It is gratifying to find that
Professor Woodrow Wilson — whose volume on 'Division and
Reunion' in the Epochs of American History Series, has an
appreciative estimate of the importance of the West as a factor
in American history — accepts some of the views set forth
in the papers above mentioned, and enhances their value by his
lucid and suggestive treatment of them in his article in The
Forum December, 1893, reviewing Goldwin Smith's 'History of
the United States.'” The present text is that of the Report of
the American Historical Association for 1893, 199-227. It was
printed with additions in the Fifth Year Book of the National
Herbart Society, and in various other publications.