University of Virginia Library


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Page 361

INDEX

  • Absentee proprietors, 55, 297
  • Achievement, 309
  • Adams, Henry, 213
  • Adams, J. Q., 26, 192, 230
  • Agriculture, 314, 329; Middle
    West, 149, 150
  • Agriculture, Department of, 320
  • Alamance, 119, 120
  • Alaska, 296
  • Albany, 43, 52
  • Albany congress of 1754, 15
  • Algonquin Indians, 130
  • Aliens, land tenure by, 110
  • Alleghany Mountains, 9, 18, 67;
    as barrier to be overcome, 195
  • Allen, Ethan, 54
  • Allen, W. V., 220
  • American Historical Assoc., 159
  • American history, social forces,
    311; survey of recent, 311
  • American life, distinguishing feature,
    2
  • American people, 339
  • American spirit, 306, 336, 337
  • "American System," 171, 172
  • Americanization, effective, 4
  • Arid lands, 9, 147, 219, 239, 245,
    278
  • Aristocracy, 250, 254, 257, 275
  • Army posts, frontier, 16; prototypes,
    47
  • Asia, 296
  • Association, voluntary, 343, 344,
    358
  • Astor's American Fur Co., 6, 143
  • Atlantic coast, as early frontier, 4;
    Mississippi Valley and, 190, 191;
    Northern, History, 295
  • Atlantic frontier, composition, 12
  • Atlantic states, 207, 208
  • Augusta, Ga., 98
  • Autocracy, 344
  • Back country, 68, 70; democracy
    of, 248; New England, 75
  • Backwoods society, 212
  • Backwoodsmen, 163, 164
  • Bacon, Francis, 286
  • Bacon's Rebellion, 84, 247, 251, 301
  • Baltimore, trade, 108
  • Bancroft, George, 168
  • Bank, 171, 254, 325
  • Bedford, Pa., 5
  • Beecher, Lyman, 35
  • Bell, John, 192
  • Benton, T. H., 26, 35, 192, 325, 328
  • Berkshires, 60, 71, 77
  • Beverley, Robert, 85, 91; manor,
    92
  • "Birch seal," 78
  • Black Hills, 145
  • Blackmar, F. W., 238
  • Blank patents, 95
  • Blood-feud, 253
  • Blount, William, 187
  • Blue Ridge, 90, 99
  • Boone, A. J., 19
  • Booae, Daniel, 18, 105, 124, 165,
    206
  • Boston, trade, 108
  • Boutmy, E. G., 211
  • Braddock, Edward, 181, 324
  • Brattle, Thomas, 56
  • British and Middle West, 350

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  • Brown, B. Gratz, 355
  • Brunswick County, Va., 91
  • Bryan, W. J., 204, 236, 237, 246,
    281, 327, 329
  • Bryce, James, 165, 206, 211, 284
  • Buffalo, N. Y., 136, 150, 151
  • Buffalo herds, 144
  • Buffer state, 131, 134
  • Burke, Edmund, 33; on the Germans,
    109
  • Byrd, Col. William, 84, 87, 98
  • Calhoun, J. C., 2, 105, 141, 174,
    206, 241; on representation, 117;
    policy of obtaining western trade
    for the South, 196
  • California, 8; gold, 144
  • Canada, 53, 226; barrier between,
    and the United States, 131; border
    warfare, 44; homesteads,
    296; Middle West and, 128;
    wheat fields, 278
  • Canadians, 227
  • Canals, deep water, 150
  • Capital, 276, 305, 325; concentration
    and combinations, 245, 261,
    266, 280, 305–306
  • "Capitalistic classes," 285
  • Capitalists, 20; "expectant," 343
  • Capitals, state, transfers, 121
  • Captains of industry, 258, 259, 260
  • Carnegie, Andrew, 260, 265
  • Caroline cow-pens, 16
  • Catron, John, 345
  • Cattle raising in Virginia, 88, 89, 92
  • Census, first, frontier at, 5
  • Census of 1820, frontier, 6
  • Census of 1890, extinction of frontier,
    1, 9, 38, 39, 297
  • Center of nation, 222
  • Channing, W. E., 355
  • Charleston, S. C., 88, 108, 196
  • Chase. S. P., 104, 142
  • Cherry Valley, 104
  • Chicago, 137, 150, 151, 180, 350;
    character, 232
  • Chillicothe, 133, 223
  • Cincinnati, 133, 151, 162, 223, 231,
    232
  • Cincinnati and Charleston R. R.,
    174
  • Cities, 297, 316–317; northeastern,
    294–295; seaboard, 194, 195,
    196; three periods of development,
    195
  • Civil War, 356; Middle West and,
    142; Mississippi Valley and, 201;
    Northwest and, 217
  • Clark, G. R., 131, 167, 186
  • Clark, J. B., 332
  • Class distinctions, 280, 285
  • Clay, Henry, 26, 168, 171, 172, 173,
    174, 192, 197, 206, 213, 216, 226,
    241, 304, 325
  • Cleaveland, Gen. Moses, 133, 222,
    257
  • Cleveland, 133, 150, 223, 231, 232
  • Clinton, De Witt, 195, 196
  • Coal supply, 313
  • Coast, Atlantic, 206; destiny, 295;
    interior and, antagonisms, 110
  • Coeducation, 353
  • Colden, Cadwallader, 80
  • Colonial life, 11
  • Colonial system, 127
  • Colonization, 312; English and
    French contrasted, 13–14; peaceful,
    169
  • Colony of free humanity, 337–338
  • Columbus, Ohio, 162, 229
  • Combinations of capital and of labor,
    245
  • Commencement seasons, 290
  • Commons, J. R., 327
  • Community, "beloved community,"
    358; life, 347; type of settlement,
    73, 74, 125
  • Competition, 154, 203, 277, 308, 312

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  • Compromise, 174, 198, 230, 236;
    slavery, 140, 142
  • Concentration of power and wealth,
    245, 261, 266, 280
  • Concord, Mass., 39
  • Concurrent majority, 118
  • Congregational church, 74, 112
  • Congress and frontiersmen, 252–
    253
  • Connecticut, frontier towns, 42, 45,
    53; land policy, 76
  • Connecticut River, 52, 53, 72
  • Connecticut Valley, 63, 73
  • Conquest, 269
  • Conscience, American, 328
  • Constitution, U. S., 209, 244
  • Constitutional convention of 1787,
    249
  • Constitutions, state, 121, 252, 352;
    reconstruction, 192
  • Coöperation, voluntary, 165, 257,
    258
  • Corn, areas, 149; belt, 151
  • Corporations, 265, 328
  • Cotton culture, 28, 139, 255; early
    extension, 7; transfer from the
    East to Mississippi Valley, 194
  • "Cotton Kingdom," 174, 189, 194,
    198
  • Coureurs de bois, 182
  • Cow pens, 16, 88
  • Crockett, Davy, 105
  • Crops, migration, 149
  • Currency, 148; evil, 32; expansion,
    210
  • Cutler, Manasseh, 141
  • Dairy interests in Wisconsin, 234,
    236
  • Dakotas, settlement, 145, 146
  • Darien, Ga., 98
  • Davis, Jefferson, 105, 139, 174
  • De Bow, J. D. B., 197
  • De Bow's Review, 217
  • Debs, E. V., 281
  • Dedham, 40, 58
  • Deerfield, 48, 52, 58, 70
  • Democracy, 32, 54, 306; doubts of,
    280; established in Old West,
    107; free land and, 274; frontier,
    early, 106; frontier and, 30, 31,
    247, 249; Gookin on, 307; in
    early 18th century, 98; Jacksonian,
    192, 302, 342–343; Jeffersonian,
    250, 251; magnitude of
    achievement in the West, 258;
    Middle West, 154; Mississippi
    Valley, 183; neighborhood, 346;
    new type in West, 210, 216; Ohio
    Valley, influence, 172; Ohio Valley
    and, 175; organized, 357;
    origin, 293; outcome of American
    experiences, 266; pressure
    on the universities, 283; significance
    of Mississippi Valley in
    promoting, 190; Upland South,
    165; Western contributions, 243;
    Western ideals, 261; see also Pioneer
    democracy
  • Democratic party, 327, 329; basis,
    248; Middle Western wing, 352
  • Democratic-Republican party, 250
  • Denver, Colo., 19
  • De Tocqueville. See Tocqueville
  • Detroit, 135, 150
  • Development, American, 205, 221;
    four changes, 244; personal, 271;
    significant decade, 246–247;
    study of, 10; true point of view,
    3; Western, 218
  • D'Iberville. See Iberville
  • Discovery, 270, 293, 301, 306
  • Doddridge, Joseph, 115
  • Dogs for hunting Indians, 45
  • Douglas, S. A., 140; Lincoln debates,
    230
  • Douglass, William, 109
  • Down east, 79

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  • Dracut, 111
  • Dreams, 301, 339
  • Duel, 253
  • Duluth, 150, 151, 234
  • Dunkards, 263
  • Dunstable, 48, 56
  • Duquesne, Abraham, 14
  • Dwight, Timothy (1752–1817), 63;
    fears of pioneer class, 251
  • East, efforts to restrict advance of
    frontier, 33, 34; fears of the
    West, 208; out of touch with
    West, 18
  • Economic forces and political institutions,
    243
  • Economic historian, 332
  • Economic legislation and Ohio Valley,
    170
  • Education, 282; Middle West, 156
  • Edwards, Jonathan, 63
  • Egleston, Melville, 55
  • Eliot, C, W., on corporation, 265;
    on democracy and slavery, 256
  • Emerson, R. W., 353; on Lincoln,
    256
  • England, decrease of dependence
    on, 23; Mississippi Valley and,
    180, 186; Old Northwest and,
    131, 134
  • English pioneers, 270
  • English settlers in Michigan and
    Wisconsin, 226
  • English stock and English speech,
    23
  • Equality, 274; New England, 61,
    62, 63; Western settlers, 212
  • Erie Canal, 7, 136, 195, 197
  • Europe, American democracy and,
    282; how America reacted on,
    3; Southeastern, 294, 295, 316
  • Europeans, 267
  • Evolution, American, as key to history,
    11
  • Expansion, 206, 219, 304, 345; Ohio
    Valley and, 166; world politics,
    246
  • Experts, 284, 285, 286
  • "Fall line," 4, 9, 68; efforts to
    establish military frontier on, 84
  • Fairfax, Lord, 92, 123
  • Far East, 315
  • Far West, 315, 341
  • Farm lands, 297
  • Farm machinery, 276
  • Farmers, 238, 239
  • Farmer's frontier, 12, 16, 18
  • Federal colonial system, 168, 169
  • Federal Reserve districts, 322
  • Fertility, 129
  • Field, Marshall, 265
  • Finance, 318, 325; pioneer ideas,
    148
  • Fire-arms and Indians, 13
  • Firmin, Giles, 56
  • Food supply, 279, 294, 314
  • Foreign parentage, Indiana and
    Illinois, 232; Michigan, 233;
    Western States, 237; Wisconsin,
    233–234
  • Foreign policy, 168, 219
  • Foreign Service, 320
  • Forest philosophy, 207
  • "Foresters," 63
  • Forests, 270, 293; Middle West,
    130
  • Fortified houses, 71
  • Fourierists, 263
  • France, efforts to revive empire in
    America, 167; Middle West and,
    131; Mississippi Valley and, 180,
    186; western exploration, 163;
  • Franchise, 249–250, 252
  • Franklin, Benjamin, Mississippi
    Valley and, 182; on the Germans,
    109
  • Free Soil party, 141, 173, 217

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  • French explorers, 163
  • French frontier, 125
  • French Huguenots, 105
  • French settlers in Michigan and
    Wisconsin, 226
  • Frontier, conservative attitude toward
    advance, 63; definition, 3,
    41; demand for independent
    statehood, 248; efforts to check
    and restrict it, 33; evil effects,
    32; extinction, 1, 9, 38, 39, 321;
    farmers, 239, 240; first official,
    39, 54; French, 125; importance
    as a military training school, 15;
    influence toward democracy, 247,
    249; kinds and modes of advance,
    12; Massachusetts, 65;
    military, of Old West, 106–107;
    religious aspects, 36; Spanish,
    125; towns in Massachusetts, 42,
    45, 53, 70; various comparisons,
    10
  • Frontiersmen, 206, 209, 212; in
    Congress, 252–253; Mississippi
    Valley, 182; Virginia idea, 86
  • Fulton, Robert, 171
  • Fur trade, 13; England after Revolution,
    131; Hudson River, 80;
    Southern, Old West, 87
  • Gallatin, Albert, 191, 252, 317
  • Galveston, 202
  • Garfield, J. A., 241
  • Geographic factors, 329
  • Geographic provinces, 158
  • Georgia, 174, 196; restriction of
    land tenure, 97; settlement, 97
  • Germanic germs, 3, 4
  • Germans, 263; in New York in
    early times, 5; Middle West and,
    137–138, 146; Palatine, 5, 32, 82,
    100, 109, 124; political exiles,
    349; sectaries, 164; Wisconsin,
    23, 227, 236; zone of settlement
    in Great Valley, 102
  • Glarus, 236
  • Godkin, E. L., 307
  • Glenn, James, 23, 108
  • Goochland County, Va., 93
  • Government, 321; paternal, 328;
    popular, 357
  • Government discipline, 356
  • Government expeditions, 17
  • Government intervention, 344
  • Government ownership, 148
  • Government powers, 307
  • Government regulation, 281
  • Granger movement, 148, 203, 218,
    276, 281
  • Grant, U. S., 142
  • Granville, Lord, 95, 123
  • Great Lakes, 128, 149, 150, 173, 297
  • Great Plains, 8, 128, 147; Indian
    trade and war, 144
  • Great Valley, 100; colonization,
    100–101
  • Greater South, 174
  • Greeley, Horace, 104
  • Green Mountain Boys, 78
  • Greenback movement, 148, 203,
    218, 276
  • Greenway manor, 92
  • Groseilliers, 180
  • Groton, 48, 57
  • Grund, F. J., 7
  • Grundy, Felix, 192
  • Gulf coast, 295
  • Gulf States, 141; occupation, 139
  • Hammond, J. H., on slavery problem
    in the Mississippi Valley, 198
  • Hanna, Marcus, 265
  • Harriman, E. H., 280, 318
  • Harrison, W. H., 168, 173, 189, 192,
    213, 255
  • Hart, A. B., 177
  • Hartford, 76

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  • Haverhill, 51, 62
  • Hayes, R. B., 241
  • Henry, Patrick, 95
  • Heroes, 254, 256; Western, 213
  • High thinking, 287
  • Higher law, 239
  • Hill, J. J., 260
  • Historian, 333
  • Historic ideals, 306, 335
  • Historical societies, 159–160, 339
  • History, character, 331–332; new
    viewpoints, 330
  • Holland, J. G., 73
  • Holst, H. E. von, 24
  • Home markets, 108, 216
  • Home missions, 36, 354
  • Homestead law of 1862, 145, 276
  • Hoosier State, 224
  • Housatonic River, 71
  • Housatonic Valley, 72
  • Houston, Sam, 105
  • Howells, W. D., 353
  • Hudson River, 53, 79; frontier, 43;
    fur trade, 80
  • Humanitarian movement, 327
  • Huxley, T. H., on modern civilization,
    300
  • Iberville, P. le M. d', 180
  • Icarians, 263
  • Idealists, America the goal, 261;
    social, 349
  • Ideals, 239; American, and the
    West, 290; American, loyalty to,
    307; American historic, 306, 335;
    immigrants, 264; Middle West,
    153; Mississippi Valley, 203;
    pioneer, and the State university,
    269; readjustment, 321, 328;
    Western, 209, 214, 267; Western
    democracy and, 261
  • Illinois, composite nationality, 232;
    elements of settlement, 225; settlement,
    135
  • Illiteracy in Middle West, 353
  • Immigrants, 277; idealism, 264
  • Immigration, 146, 215, 316
  • Indian guides, 17
  • Indian policy, 10
  • Indian question, early, 9
  • Indian reservations, 278
  • Indian trade, 6, 13, 14; Middle
    West, 143, 144
  • Indian wars, 9; New England and,
    69; Ohio Valley and, 167
  • Indiana, character, 232; constitution,
    282; elements in settlement,
    223–224; settlement, 134
  • Indianapolis, 162, 229
  • Indians, buffer state for England,
    131, 134; congresses to treat
    with, 15; effects of trades on, 13;
    hunting Indians with dogs, 95;
    influence on Puritans and New
    England, 44; Middle West and,
    133, 134; society, 13
  • Individualism, 30, 32, 37, 78, 125,
    140, 203, 254, 259, 271, 273, 302,
    306; in the Old West, 107; reaction
    against, 307; Upland South,
    165
  • Industrial conditions, 280, 281,
    285; Middle West, 149, 154;
    Mississippi Valley, 194, 201;
    Ohio Valley and, 175
  • Industry, captains of, and large
    undertakings, 258, 259, 260; control,
    318
  • Inland waterways, 202
  • Insurgent movement, 327
  • Intellectual life and the frontier,
    37
  • Intercolonial congresses, 15
  • Interior and coast, antagonisms,
    110
  • Internal commerce, 171, 188
  • Internal improvements, 27, 28, 29,
    111, 170, 172, 216, 257; after

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    1812 to break down barrier to
    West, 195; Old West, 109
  • Internal trade, Old West, 108, 109
  • Iowa, 141, 143; elements and
    growth, 229; settlement, 137
  • Ipswich, 56
  • Irish, 350
  • Iron mines in Middle West, 152
  • Iron ore, 313
  • Iroquois Indians, 13, 80
  • Irrigation, 258, 279
  • Isms, 239
  • Izard, Ralph, 274
  • Jackson, Andrew, 105, 168, 173,
    189, 206, 213, 216, 241, 252, 253,
    268, 326; personification of frontier
    traits, 252, 254
  • Jackson, Stonewall, 105
  • Jacksonian democracy, 192, 302,
    342–343
  • James River, 84, 90; settlement, 93
  • Jefferson, Thomas, 93, 105, 114,
    268; conception of democracy,
    250, 251; on England and the
    Mississippi, 186; on the pioneer
    in Congress, 253; on the importance
    of the Mississippi Valley,
    188
  • "Jim River" Valley, 145
  • Johnson, R. M., 192
  • Johnson, Sir William, 81, 104
  • Justice, direct forms in the West,
    212
  • Kansas, 142, 144, 146, 151; Populists,
    238; settlers, 237
  • Kansas City, 151
  • Kentucky, 19, 122, 162, 167, 168,
    169, 192, 225, 253; slavery, 174
  • King Philip's War 40, 46, 69
  • Kipling, Rudyard, "Toreloper,"
    270; "Son of the English," 262
  • Labor, combinations, 245; composition
    of laboring class, 316
  • Labor theorists, 303, 326
  • Lamar, L. Q. C. (1825–1893), 25
  • Lancaster, Mass., 48, 57, 61
  • Land, 328–329; abundance, 274;
    abundance, as basis of democracy,
    191, 192; alien tenure, 110;
    free, exhausted, 244–245; free
    Western, 211, 259; fundamental
    fact in Western society, 211;
    "mongering," 61; see, also Public
    lands
  • Land companies, 123, 347
  • Land grants, 9; for schools and
    colleges, 74; to railroads, 276
  • Land Ordinance of 1785, 132
  • Land policies, 10
  • Land system, "equality" principle
    in New England, 61, 62, 63;
    Georgia, 97; later federal, 123;
    New England, 54; New England
    conflicts, 75; New York State,
    80; North Carolina, 95; Old
    West, 122; Pennsylvania, 101;
    Virginia, 91; Virginia grants to
    societies, 85
  • La Salle, 180
  • Laurentide glacier, 129
  • Law and order, 298, 344
  • Leadership, 213, 291, 292, 307;
    educated, 286
  • Lease, Mary Ellen, 240
  • Legislation, 277, 307; frontier and,
    24; Leicester, 59; Leigh, B. W.,
    115
  • Lewis and Clark, 13, 17
  • Liberty, Bacon on, 286; for universities,
    287; individual, 213;
    Western, 212
  • Life as a whole, 287
  • Lincoln, Abraham, 105, 135, 142,
    174, 206, 213, 217, 225, 241 268,
    304 356; Douglas debates 230;

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    embodiment of pioneer period,
    255–256; Ohio Valley, influence
    of, 175
  • Lincoln, C. H, 113
  • Litchfield, 71, 76, 124
  • Livingston manor, 81, 82
  • Locofocos, 303, 326, 348
  • Log cabin, 338
  • "Log cabin campaign," 173
  • London Company, 301
  • Loria, Achille, 11
  • Louisiana, 180, 208
  • Louisiana Purchase, 25, 34, 140,
    167, 213, 251; effect on Mississippi
    Valley, 189–190
  • Louisville, 162
  • LoWell, J. R., on Lincoln, 255
  • Loyal Land Co., 123, 182
  • Lumber industry, 152; Wisconsin,
    234–235
  • Lumbermen, 272, 273
  • Lynch law, 212, 272; New England,
    78
  • McKinley, William, 236, 237, 241
  • Magnitude, 258, 260, 276
  • Maine, 52–53
  • Maine coast, 79
  • Mallet brothers, 180
  • Manila, battle of, 247
  • Manorial practice in New York, 83
  • Marietta, 124, 132, 223, 257
  • "Mark colonies," 70
  • Marquette, Jacques, 180
  • Martineau, Harriet, 214, 303, 339
  • Massachusetts, attempt to locate
    frontier line, 39; frontier, 65;
    frontier towns, 42, 45, 53, 70;
    locating towns before settlement,
    76
  • Mather, Cotton, attitude as to advancing
    frontier, 63
  • Mesabi mines, 152, 234
  • Mendon, 57
  • Methodists, 238
  • Mexico, 295
  • Michigan, 135–136, 137; development
    and resources, 232; settlement,
    226, 228
  • Middle region, 27; in formation of
    the Old West, 79; typical American,
    28
  • Middle West, agriculture, 150;
    Canada and, 128; Civil War and,
    142; early society, 153–154; education,
    282; elements of settlement
    —Northern and Southern,
    346, 351; Europe and, 282; flow
    of population into, 132–133; forests,
    130; Germans and, 137–
    138; Germans and Scandinavians,
    146; idealism, 153; immigrants
    of varied nationalities,
    349; importance, 126, 128; increase
    of settlement in the fifties,
    142–143; industrial organism,
    149; meaning of term, 126; nationalism,
    142; natural resources,
    129; New England element, 137;
    peculiarity and influence, 347;
    pioneer democracy, 335; settlement,
    135, 342; slavery question
    and, 139; southern zone, 138
  • Migration, 21, 237, 337; communal
    vs. individual, 125; crops, 149;
    interstate, 224; labor, 62; New
    England, and land policy, 77
  • Militant expansive movement, 105
  • Military frontier, 41, 47; early
    form, 47; Old West, significance,
    106–107; Virginia in later 17th
    century, 83, 84
  • Milwaukee, 137, 227, 236, 350
  • Miner's frontier, 12
  • Mining camps, 9
  • Mining laws, 10
  • Minneapolis, 137, 151, 234
  • Minnesota, 143, 144, 237; economic

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    development, 234; Historical Society,
    335, 338–339
  • Missions to the Indians, 79
  • Mississippi Company, 123, 182
  • Mississippi River, 7, 9, 142, 185,
    194, 345
  • Mississippi Valley, 10, 139, 166–
    167, 324; beginning of stratification,
    197; Civil War and, 201;
    democracy and, 190; early population,
    183; economic progress
    after 1812, 194; England's efforts
    to control, 180–181; extent, 179;
    French explorers in, 180; frontiersmen's
    allegiance, 186–187;
    idealism, social order, 203–204;
    industrial growth after the Civil
    War, 201–202; political power
    and growth from 1810 to 1840,
    193; primitive history, 179; question
    of severance from the Union,
    187; significance in American
    history, 177, 185; slavery struggle
    and, 201; social forces, early,
    183
  • Missouri, 192
  • Missouri Compromise, 140, 174, 226
  • Missouri Valley, 135
  • Mohawk Valley, 68, 82
  • Monroe, James, 150
  • Monroe Doctrine, 296; germ, 168
  • Monticello, 93
  • Moravians, 95, 102
  • Morgan, J. P., 318
  • Mormons, 263
  • Morris, Gouverneur, 207
  • Nashaway, 57
  • National problem, 293
  • Nationalism, 29; evils of, 157; Middle
    West and, 142
  • Nationalities, mixture, 27; replacement
    in Wisconsin, 235
  • Naturalization, 110
  • Nebraska, 144, 145, 220; settlers
    237
  • Negro, 295
  • New England, 27, 301; back lands,
    75; coast vs. interior, 111; colonies
    from, 124; culmination of
    frontier movement, 78; early official
    frontier line, 43; economic
    life, 78; effect on the West, 36;
    foreign element, 294; frontier
    protection, 46–47; frontier types,
    43–44; Greater New England, 66,
    70; ideas, and Middle West, 348;
    Indian wars, 69; land system, 54;
    Middle West and, 347; Ohio settlement
    and, 223; Old West and,
    68; Old West and interior New
    England, 70; pioneer type, 239;
    streams of settlement from, 215;
    two New Englands of the formative
    period of the Old West, 78–
    79
  • New Englanders in the Middle
    West, 137; in Wisconsin and the
    lake region, 228; three movements
    of advance from the coast,
    136; Westernized, 215, 216
  • New Glarus, 236
  • New Hampshire, 69, 72, 77, 111
  • New Hampshire grants, 77
  • New Northwest, 222
  • New Orleans, 136, 137, 167, 187,
    188, 189, 217, 295
  • New South, 218; Old West and, 100
  • New West, 257
  • New York City, 136, 195, 318
  • New York State, early frontier 43;
    lack of expansive power, 80;
    land system, 80; settlement from
    New England, 83; western, 230
  • Newspapers of the Middle West,
    353
  • Nitrates, 279
  • Norfolk, 195

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  • North Carolina, 87, 106; coast vs.
    upland, 116; in Indiana Settlement,
    224; public lands, 95; settlement,
    94, 95; slavery, 122; taxation,
    118, 119
  • North Central States, 126; region
    as a whole, 341
  • North Dakota, development, 237
  • Northampton, 63
  • Northfield, 53
  • Northwest, democracy, 356; Old
    and New, 222; see also Old
    Northwest
  • Northwest Territory, 222
  • Northwestern boundary, 324
  • Norton, C. E., 208–209
  • Norwegians, 232
  • Nullification, 117, 254
  • Ohio, diversity of interests, 231–
    232; elements of settlement, 223;
    history, 133–134; New England
    element, 223; Southern contribution
    to settlement, 223
  • Ohio Company, 123, 133, 141, 182,
    223
  • Ohio River, 5, 161
  • Ohio Valley, 104; as a highway,
    162; economic legislation and,
    170; effects on national expansion,
    166; in American history,
    157; influence on Lincoln, 175;
    part in making of the nation,
    160; physiography, 160–161; relation
    to the South, 174; religious
    spirit, 164, 165; stock and
    settlement, 164
  • Oil wells, 297
  • Oklahoma, 278, 297
  • Old National road, 136
  • Old Northwest, 131, 132, 136, 221;
    as a whole, 241–242; defined,
    218; elements of settlement,
    222; political position, 236; social
    origin, 222–223; Southern
    element in settlement, 223, 225–
    226; turning point of control,
    229
  • "Old South," 166
  • Old West, colonization of areas beyond
    the mountains, 124; consequences
    of formation, 106; New
    South and, 100; summary of
    frontier movement in 17th and
    early 18th centuries, 98; term
    defined, 68
  • Old World, 261, 267, 294, 299, 344,
    349; effect of American frontier,
    22; West and, 206, 210
  • Opportunity, 37, 212, 239, 259–260,
    261, 263, 271–272, 342, 343
  • Orangeburg, 96
  • Ordinance of 1787, 25, 132, 168,
    190, 223
  • Oregon country, 144
  • Orient, 297
  • Osgood, H. L., 30
  • Pacific coast, 168, 219, 304
  • Pacific Northwest, 296
  • Pacific Ocean, 297, 315
  • Packing industries, 151
  • Palatine Germans, 5, 22, 100, 109,
    124; New York State and, 82
  • Palisades, 71
  • Panama Canal, 295
  • Panics, 279–280
  • Paper money, 32, 111, 121, 122,
    209
  • Parkman, Francis, 70, 72, 144, 163
  • "Particular plantations," 41
  • Past, lessons of, 355
  • Patroon estates, 80
  • Paxton Boys, 112
  • Pecks "New Guide to the West,"
    19
  • Penn, William, 262
  • Pennsylvania, 23, 27; coast and

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    interior, antagonisms, 112; German
    settlement, 82, 100; Great
    Valley of, 68, 164; land grants,
    101; new Pennsylvania of the
    Great Valley, 100; Scotch-Irish,
    103, 104; settlement of Old West
    part, 83
  • Pennsylvania Dutch, 22, 100, 110
  • Perrot, Nicolas, 180
  • Philadelphia, 106; trade, 108
  • Physiographic provinces, 127
  • Piedmont, 68; Virginia, 87, 89
  • Pig iron, 152, 313
  • Pine, 151
  • Pine belt in Middle West, 143
  • Pioneer democracy, lessons learned,
    357; Middle West, 335
  • Pioneer farmers, 21, 206, 257
  • Pioneers, conservative fears about,
    251, 252; contest with capitalist,
    325; contrast of conditions, 279;
    deeper significance, 338; essence,
    271; ideals and the State university,
    269; Middle West, 146,
    154; Ohio Valley, 167; old
    ideals, 148; sketch, 19
  • Pittsburgh, 104, 127, 136, 154–155,
    161, 265, 299, 314, 324
  • Plain people, 256, 267
  • Political institutions, 243; frontier
    and, 24
  • Political parties, 249, 324
  • Polk, J. K., 105, 192, 255
  • Pontiac, 131, 144
  • Poor whites, 224
  • Population center, 222
  • Populists, 32, 127, 147, 155, 203,
    220, 247, 277, 281, 305; Kansas,
    238
  • Prairie Plains, 129
  • Prairie states, 239
  • Prairies, 218, 236, 276, 348; settlement,
    145, 147
  • Presbyterians, 105, 106, 109, 164
  • Presidency, 254; Mississippi Valley
    and, 192; Ohio Valley and, 175;
    Old Northwest and, 222
  • Prices, 313
  • Princeton college, 106
  • Pritchett, H. S., 282
  • Privilege, 192; conflict against,
    120, 121
  • Proclamation of 1763, 181
  • Progressive Republican movement,
    321
  • Prohibitionists, 240
  • "Proletariat," 285
  • Property, 210; as basis of suffrage,
    249
  • Prosperity, 281
  • Protection. See Tariff
  • Provinces, geographic, 158
  • Provincialism, desirable, 157, 159
  • Prussianism, 337, 356
  • Public lands, 25, 132, 303; policy
    of America, 26, 170; Western
    lands, first debates on, 191
  • Public schools, 266, 282
  • Puget Sound, 298
  • Puritan ideals, 73, 75, 78; German
    conflict with, 138
  • Puritanism, 27
  • Puritans and Indians, 44
  • Purrysburg, 97
  • Pyrichon, John, 51, 52
  • Quakers, 105, 112, 164; in settlement
    of Indiana, 224
  • Quebec, Province of, 131
  • Quincy, Josiah, 208
  • Radisson, Sieur de, 180
  • Railroads, administration by regions,
    322; Chicago and, 150;
    continental, 247; in early fifties,
    137; land grants to, 276; Mississippi
    Valley, 304; northwestern,
    145; origin, 14; speculative

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    movement, 276; statistics, 314;
    western, 218
  • Rancher's frontier, 12, 16
  • Ranches, 9, 16; Virginia, 88
  • Rappahannock River, 84, 90; settlement,
    93
  • Reclamation, 298
  • Reclamation Service, 320
  • Red Cloud (Indian), 144
  • Red River valley, 145
  • Redemptioners, 22, 90, 97, 100
  • Reformers, 281, 324; social, 262–
    263
  • Regulation, War of the, 248
  • Regulators, 116, 119, 120, 212
  • Religion of the Middle West, 345
  • Religious freedom of the Old West,
    121
  • Religious spirit, Ohio Valley, 164,
    165; Upland South, 164, 165
  • Rensselaerswyck, 80
  • Representation, 114, 117, 120
  • Republican party, 327
  • Research, 284, 287, 331
  • Revolution, American, 30
  • Rhodes, J. F., 24
  • Richmond, Va., 108
  • Rights, equal, 326–327, 338; of
    man, 192
  • Ripley, W. Z., 316
  • Robertson, James, 105, 187
  • Rockefeller, J. D., 260, 264–265
  • Rocky Mountains, 8, 9, 10, 298
  • Roosevelt, Theodore, 202, 204, 281,
    319, 327; on the Mississippi Valley,
    178; "Winning of the
    West," 67
  • Root, Elihu, 159
  • Roxbury, 59
  • Royce, Josiah, 157, 358
  • Rush, Richard, 317
  • St Louis, 151, 161, 229
  • St. Paul, 137, 234
  • Salisbury, Mass., 56
  • Salt, 17; annual pilgrimage to
    coast for, 17
  • Salt springs, 17, 18
  • Salzburgers, 97
  • Sandys, Sir Edwin, 301
  • Sault Ste. Marie Canal, 149
  • Scalps, Massachusetts bounty for,
    45
  • Scandinavians, 263, 350; Middle
    West, 146; Western life, 232–
    233, 234
  • Schools, early difficulties, 107; see
    also
    Public schools
  • Schurz, Carl, 337
  • Science, 284, 330–331
  • Scientific farming, 294
  • Scotch Highlanders, 104; Georgia,
    98
  • Scotch-Irish, 5, 22, 71; migration
    in Great Valley and Piedmont,
    103; Pennsylvania, 104; South
    Carolina, 97; Virginia, 86, 91–
    92
  • Scotch-Irish Presbyterians, 105,
    109, 164
  • Scovillites, 116
  • Seaboard cities, 194, 195, 196
  • Seattle, 298
  • "Section" of land, 123, 132
  • Sectionalism, 27, 28, 52, 157, 215,
    220, 321
  • Sections, relation, 159
  • Self-government, 169, 190, 207, 248,
    275
  • Self-made man, 219, 318
  • Servants, 60, 353
  • Service to the Union, 358
  • Settlement, community type, 73,
    74
  • Settler, 20
  • Sevier, John, 105, 187
  • Seward, W. H., 141; on the Northwest,
    230; on the slavery issue

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    in the Mississippi Valley, 199,
    200
  • Shays' Rebellion, 112, 119, 122, 249
  • Sheffield, 71
  • Sheldon, George, 58
  • Shenandoah Valley, 68, 90, 91, 92,
    99, 105
  • Sherman, W. T., 142
  • Sibley, H. H. (1811–1891), 272,
    273, 328
  • Silver movement, 238, 239, 329
  • Simsbury, 63
  • Singletary, Amos, 240
  • Sioux Indians, 130
  • Six Nations, 15, 83
  • Slavery question, 24, 29, 98, 111,
    139, 304, 330; compromise movement,
    174; democracy and, 256;
    expansion, 174; Middle West
    and, 139; Mississippi Valley and,
    198, 201; Northwest and, 230;
    slaves as property, 115; Virginia
    and North Carolina, 122
  • Smith, Major Lawrence, 84
  • Social control, 277
  • Social forces, in American history,
    311; mode of investigating, 330;
    on the Atlantic coast, 295;
    political institutions and,
    243
  • Social mobility, 355
  • Social order, Mississippi Valley,
    203–204; new, 263
  • Social reformers, 262–263
  • Socialism, 246, 277, 307, 321
  • Society, backwoods, 212; rebirth
    of in the West, 205
  • Soils, 278, 279; search for, 18
  • Solid South, 217
  • South, 27, 166, 218; contribution
    to settlement of Old Northwest
    (Ohio, Indiana, Illinois), 223,
    225–226; Ohio Valley and, 174;
    solid, 217; transforming forces,
    295; West and, 196, 197; see
    also
    Upland South
  • South Carolina, 174; condition of
    antagonism between coast and Interior,
    116; land system, townships,
    96; trade, 108
  • South Dakota, development, 237
  • Southeastern Europe, 294, 299, 316
  • Southerners and the Middle West,
    133–134, 135, 138
  • Southwest, 297
  • Spain, 167, 181, 246; Mississippi
    Valley and, 184, 185
  • Spangenberg, A. G., 17
  • Spanish America 181, 182, 295
  • Spanish frontier, 125
  • Spanish War, 246
  • Speculation, 319
  • Spoils system, 32, 254
  • Spotswood, Alexander, 22, 88, 90,
    91, 113, 247; Mississippi Valley
    and, 180
  • Spotsylvania County, Va., 90
  • Spreckles, Claus, 265
  • Squatter-sovereignty, 140
  • Squatters, 272, 343; doctrines, 273,
    328; ideal, 320; Middle West,
    137; Ohio Valley, 170; Pennsylvania
    in 1726, 101
  • Stark, John, 103–104
  • State historical societies, 340
  • State lines, 127
  • State universities, 221, 354; as safeguard
    of democracy, 286; Michigan,
    233; peculiar power, 283–
    284; pioneer ideals and, 269, 281
  • States checkerboard, 218; frontier
    pioneers' demand for statehood,
    248; groups, 159; new states vs.
    Atlantic States, 207; System of,
    168
  • Staunton, Va., 92
  • Steam navigation, 7, 135, 171,
  • Steel, 313

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  • Steel and iron industry, 152
  • Stockbridge, 79
  • Stoddard, Solomon, 45
  • Success, 288, 309
  • Sudbury, 39
  • Suffrage, 192, 216; basis, 249;
    frontier and extension, 30; manhood,
    250, 352
  • Superior, Lake, 180, 314; iron
    mines, 152
  • Swedes, 233
  • Symmes Purchase, 223
  • Talleyrand, 299
  • Taney, R. B., 141
  • Tariff, 25, 27, 170, 172, 197, 216
  • Taylor, Zachary, 255
  • Tecumthe, 134, 144
  • Tennessee, 122, 168, 187, 225, 252,
    253; democracy, 192
  • Tennyson's "Ulysses," 310
  • Territories, system of, 168, 169
  • Texas, 168
  • Thomas, J. B., 174
  • Tocqueville, A. C. H. C. de, 153,
    275, 303, 343
  • Toledo, Ohio, 231
  • Toleration, 355
  • Town meeting, 62
  • Towns, legislating into existence,
    125; locating, Massachusetts, 76;
    New England and Virginia, 41;
    new settlements in New England,
    55; South Carolina, 96; typical
    form of establishing in New England,
    74; Virginia, 85, 86
  • Trader's frontier, 12; effects following,
    12; rapidity of advance,
    12, 13
  • Trading posts, 14
  • Transportation, 148; Great Lakes,
    150
  • Tryon, William, 106
  • Tuscarora War, 94, 95
  • Ulstermen, 103
  • Unification of the West, 215
  • United States, collection of nations,
    158; development since
    1890, 311; federal aspect, 159;
    fundamental forces, 311; original
    contribution to society, 281–282;
    wealth, 312
  • U. S. Steel Corporation, 152–153,
    247, 265, 313
  • Universities, duties, 292; function,
    287; influence of university men,
    285; need of freedom, 287; pressure
    of democracies on, 283;
    State and, 286; see also State
    universities
  • Upland South, 164; religious spirit,
    164, 165
  • Van Buren, Martin, 254, 326
  • Van Rensselaer manor, 81
  • Vandalia, 229
  • Verendryes, the, 180
  • Vermont, 69, 72, 77, 78, 111, 122,
    136
  • Vermonters in Wisconsin and
    Michigan, 228
  • Vicksburg, 201
  • Vigilance committees, 212
  • Vinton, S. F., 141, 229
  • Virginia, 301; early attempt to establish
    frontier, 41; Indian wars,
    69–70; inequalities, coast vs.
    interior, 113; interest in Mississippi
    Valley, 182; land grants,
    91; land grants to societies, 85;
    Piedmont, society, 95; Piedmont
    portions, 87, 89; settlement in
    latter part of 17th century, 83;
    slavery, 122; two Virginias in
    later 17th century, 94; Western
    democracy and, 250
  • Virginia Convention of 1829–30,
    28, 31

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  • Visions, 270, 331, 339–340
  • Voyageurs, 17
  • Wachovia, 95
  • Walker, F. A., 128
  • War of 1812, 168, 213
  • Washington, George, 92, 124; Mississippi
    Valley and, 181, 182,
    194, 196, 324; Ohio Valley and,
    163, 167
  • Wealth, 213–214, 219, 288, 319;
    democracy versus, 192; in politics,
    173; United States, 312
  • Wells (town), 47
  • "Welsh tract," 97
  • Wentworth, Benning, 77
  • West, American ideals and, 290;
    beginning of, 6; center of interest,
    327; constructive force,
    206; contributions to democracy,
    243; factor in American history,
    1, 3; ideals, 209, 214, 267; indefiniteness
    of term, 126; insurgent
    voice, 319; main streams of
    settlement, 215; mark of New
    England, 36; phase of division,
    216–217; population, 35; problem
    of, 205; South and, 196,
    197; war ings against, 208, 209;
    Middle West; see also Old West;
    Old Northwest
  • West Virginia, 114
  • Westchester County, N. Y., 81
  • Western colleges, 36
  • Western life, dominant forces, 222
  • Western Reserve, 124, 133
  • Western spirit, 310
  • "Western Waters," 161, 206, 302;
    men of freedom and1' independence,
    183.
  • "Western World," 161, 166, 206,
    302; basis of its civilization, 177
  • Wheat, 329; areas, 149
  • Whig party, 27, 173, 304, 351
  • White, Abraham, 240
  • White, Hugh, 192
  • Whitman, Walt, 336
  • Wilderness, 262, 269, 270, 279
  • Wilkinson, James, 169, 187
  • Williams, John (1664–1729), 70
  • Williams, Roger, 262
  • Windsor, 76
  • Winthrop, John, 62
  • Wisconsin, 137, 138, 218, 294, 341;
    development and elements, 233–
    234; German element, 227, 228,
    236; New England element, 228;
    settlement, 226, 227
  • Wood, Abraham, 98
  • Woodstock, 59
  • World's fairs, 156
  • World-politics, 246, 315
  • Wyoming Valley, 79, 124
  • Yemassee War, 95
  • "Young America" doctrine, 140