New England Metropolis

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19th century American economy
A01=Richard Garver
agricultural decline and urban rise
agricultural decline New England
agriculture
Americ
American capitalism origins
American economic history 1800s
American industrial revolution Northeast
antebellum American economy
antebellum southern markets
antebellum trade networks
Author_Richard Garver
Boston as a financial hub
Boston commercial elite
Boston financial history
Boston industrial history
Boston merchant capitalism
Boston port history
Boston trade networks
Boston's metropolitan regional influence
Boston's role in modern industry
business innovation in early America
capital
Caribbean
Caribbean trade New England
Category=KND
Category=NHB
Category=NHK
Category=WQH
colonies
commerce
commercial infrastructure history
comparison to New York trading center
Connecticut and Rhode Island industry
consumer goods manufacturing history
cottage industry New England
depression
early American industrialization
early American merchant class
economic history northeastern US
economic transformation of the Northeast
embargo
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
evolution
evolution of New England's economy
factory system origins
financial market development
financial markets in nineteenth-century Boston
forthcoming
globalization
hinterland
hinterland manufacturing economy
historical economic hubs of United States
historical infrastructure development
history of textiles and consumer goods
household labor in manufacturing era
household labor manufacturing
impact of industrialization on local communities
industrial geography of the Northeast
industrial geography United States
industry
labor force
lasting effects of nineteenth-century industry
links between Boston merchants and the South
manufacturing expansion in rural towns
maritime
market integration 19th century
Massachusetts history
merchant capital networks
merchant capitalists
merchant capitalists in Boston
metropolitan economic systems
neutral trade
New England cities and industrial growth
New England demographic history
New England economic transformation
New England industrial revolution
New England manufacturing towns
New England maritime legacy
New England rural entrepreneurship
New England village to mill town
New England's commercial adaptation
nineteenth-century New England economy
oligarchy
origins of New England prosperity
overseas trade
Panic of 1819
prosperity
proto-industrialization United States
putting-out system history
railroad
raw materials supply chains
recovery
regional development driven by trade and industry
regional economic geography
regional specialization manufacturing
regional trade networks in New England
Rhode Island
rural
rural industrialization in America
rural manufacturing villages
rural migration during industrial age
rural to industrial transition
shifting economies in the 1800s
slavery and northern industry
textile complex history
textile industry in Massachusetts
textile manufacturing
textile manufacturing history
trade with the Caribbean economies
transformation from farming to factories
transportation networks industrialization
underemployed agricultural labor
urban
urban hinterland relationships
urbanization driven by manufacturing
village artisans
West Indies

Product details

  • ISBN 9781625348920
  • Weight: 454g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 28 Aug 2026
  • Publisher: University of Massachusetts Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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At the outset of the nineteenth century, Boston was at its zenith as a maritime city even as New England was in decline. Many struggling farmers abandoned the area for more promising opportunities to the west. Yet by 1850, New England had been transformed into one of the most industrialized regions in the world. Former agricultural villages had become specialized manufacturing towns producing consumer goods for sale, and Boston merchant capitalists had established textile complexes that produced fabrics in huge quantities. Although Boston had been superseded by New York as a trading center, it thrived not only as a financial market but as an exchange hub in which these hinterland manufacturers acquired raw materials, capital, sales services, and transportation. With Boston at its metropolitan center, New England was transformed into an industrial geography that was unique nationally and internationally.

New England Metropolis demonstrates that, in contrast to the course of industrialization in other regions of the country, New England's transformation was driven by entrepreneurs in hundreds of rural villages and towns and by and Boston merchant capitalists who recruited underemployed agricultural household members to produce consumer goods for sale beyond the region, including in the slave economies of the South and the Caribbean. As Boston merchants adapted commercial, financial and transportation infrastructure they had developed to serve overseas trade to the needs of the region's manufacturers, industrialization halted New England's decline and, by 1850, had propelled it to prosperity.

Richard Garver is a fellow at the Massachusetts Historical Society, where he produced a symposium on Boston's development history in addition to the symposium on highway politics he organized with the Cambridge Historical Society. He was on the planning team for and was a leading contributor to The Atlas of Boston History.

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