The history of US imperialism remains incomplete without this consideration of long-overlooked nineteenth-century American commercial and whaling ventures in the Indian Ocean. Yankees in the Indian Ocean shows how nineteenth-century American merchant and whaler activity in the Indian Ocean shaped the imperial future of the United States, influenced the region’s commerce, encouraged illegal slaving, and contributed to environmental degradation. For a brief time, Americans outnumbered other Western visitors to Mauritius, Madagascar, Zanzibar, and the East African littoral. In a relentless search for commodities and provisions, American whaleships landed at islands throughout the ocean and stripped them of resources. Yet Americans failed to develop a permanent foothold in the region and operated instead from a position of weakness relative to other major colonizing powers, thus discouraging the development of American imperial holdings there. The history of American concerns in the Indian Ocean world remains largely unwritten. Scholars who focus on the region have mostly ignored American involvement, despite arguments for the ocean’s importance in powering global connections during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Historians of the United States likewise have failed to examine the western Indian Ocean because of a preoccupation with US interests in Asia and the Pacific. Failing to understand the scale of American trade in the Indian Ocean has led to a fixation on European commercial strength to the exclusion of other maritime networks. Instead, this book reveals how the people of Madagascar and East Africa helped the United States briefly dominate commerce and whaling. This book investigates how and why Americans were drawn to the western Indian Ocean years before the United States established a formal overseas empire in the late nineteenth century. Ship logs, sailor journals, and travel narratives reveal how American men transformed foreign land- and seascapes into knowable spaces that confirmed American conceptions of people and natural resources; these sources also provide insight into the complex social and ecological worlds of the Indian Ocean during this critical time.
The accounts of these adventurous travelers reveal how they and hundreds of other mariners and expatriates influenced the ways in which Americans defined themselves, thereby creating a genuinely brash national character—the “true Yankee ...
(London, 1697), William Funnell's A Voyage Round the World (London, 1707), Woodes Rogers's A Cruising Voyage Round the World (London, 1712), Edward Cooke's A Voyage to the South Sea, and Round the World (London, 1712), ...
In Feeding Globalization, Jane Hooper draws on challenging and previously untapped sources to analyze Madagascar’s role in provisioning European trading networks within and ultimately beyond the Indian Ocean.
... Yankee skippers ttom New England began to sell goods, which Sydney's matker eagerly absorbed, ignoting Btitish ptohibitions against trade with the Unired Srares. The Yankees soon won a good shate of the Australian matker, selling ...
On overseers, see William Kauffman Scarborough, The Overseer: Plantation Management in the Old South (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1966); William E. Wiethoff, Crafting the Overseer's Image (Columbia: University of ...
Battuta, Ibn Batutta in the Maldives and Ceylon, 11; Pyrard, Voyage of François Pyrard, Gray's note, 237; Hogendorn and Johnson, Shell Money, 34; see also Christopher Reynolds, A Maldivian Dictionary (London: Routledge, 1993), 95. 29.
The Indian Ocean World of the Seventeenth Century Rene J. Barendse. Trade.Paris and Brussels , 1996 . Palat , R. , and I ... Yankees and Creoles : A Study of Trade Between North America and the Carribean Colonies Before the Revolution ...
This statement was recorded by Paul Rusch in 1950, included in a report titled, “The Challenge of Postwar Japan,” as quoted in William Woodard, The Allied Occupation of Japan 1945–1952 and Japanese Religions (Leiden: E.J. Brill, 1972), ...
... Indian Ocean (21). 10. Ibid., 22. 11. Wiley Yankees in the Land of the Gods, 1:475. 12. B. Anderson, Imagined Communities, 30. 13. Hawks, Narrative of the Expedition, 1:3. 14. Ibid., 1:74. 15. Ibid., 1:5. 16. Ibid., 1:4. 17. Ibid., 2 ...
... Unreasonable Histories. Taken collectively, this scholarship has demonstrated several important insights: the distribution of citizenship rights based on territorial claims has been observed in some regions since earliest times; being ...