Money and the Making of the American Revolution

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A01=Andrew David Edwards
American Revolution
Author_Andrew David Edwards
banks
British
capitalism
Category=JPB
Category=KCZ
causality
change
colonial
constitution
crypto
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
famine
Farley Grubb
finance
financial
gold
India
institutions
Jeffrey Sklansky
Katie Moore
monetary design
money
Parliament
revolt
revolution
silver
slavery
stock markets
The Marketplace of Revolution
trade
United States
Virginia
war

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691200262
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 02 Dec 2025
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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A new interpretation of the American Revolution as a transformative monetary contest

American money and American democracy have always been in tension, pitting political equality against economic inequality. In Money and the Making of the American Revolution, Andrew David Edwards shows how this struggle emerged in America’s founding era. Everyone knows that the founders waged a revolt against taxation without representation. Edwards shows that the dispute over taxes was really a dispute over money: what it was, who could make it, and how to keep it from being used at the expense of the colonists in North America. The colonial rebels refocused their resistance on democratic, local control—defending the power they had used to make money for themselves.

Edwards’s narrative spans four continents, linking the problems of money and revolt in early America to the transatlantic slave trade, the disastrous mismanagement of the East India Company in India, and violence against Native Americans. His analysis emerges from the story itself, through the lives of individuals ranging from John Blackwell, Oliver Cromwell's one-time war treasurer, to Thomas Paine, the impassioned pamphleteer of the American Revolution. Edwards argues that as the republican vision of an agrarian, independent monetary system faded, the leaders of the Revolution tied the nation to capitalism and imperialism at its founding. The colonists may have won the battle for representation, but the money that underpinned European empire had established a stronghold in the new republic. Money and the Making of the American Revolution offers both an ambitious new interpretation of the Revolution and a fascinating story about the power of economic ideas.

Andrew David Edwards is lecturer in early American history at the University of St Andrews.

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