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Textbook Details

  • ISBN:
    0393327957
  • ISBN-13:
    9780393327953
  • PUB. DATE:
    February 2006
  • PUBLISHER:
    Norton, W. W. & Company, Inc.
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Wedding of the Waters: The Erie Canal and the Making of a Great Nation by Peter L. Bernstein

$16.95 List Price
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ndggcby Anonymous

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Interesting book about an underappreciated period of U.S. Historyby Father_of_5_Boys

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This was a good book about an underappreciated, and not much talked about, time in our history. The building of the Erie Canal was a monumental undertaking and had tremendous impacts on how this country developed. As the author points out, it had impacts on how other parts of the world developed too, because it opened up the breadbasket that is the Midwest and provided a source of food for industrializing...

Packed with Knowledge!by Anonymous

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From a modern perspective, a ditch allowing barges to travel between Rust Belt cities in upstate New York hardly seems the stuff of high drama. But well-regarded economist and historian Peter L. Bernstein accomplishes the tough task of making readers care about the Erie Canal, the massive public works project that he believes changed the course of U.S. and world politics and trade. This compelling...


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Wedding of the Waters

Product Details

  • Pub. Date: February 2006
  • Publisher: Norton, W. W. & Company, Inc.
  • Sales Rank: 256,457

Synopsis

The building of the Erie Canal, like the construction of the Brooklyn Bridge and the Panama Canal, is one of the greatest and most riveting stories of American ingenuity. Best-selling author Peter Bernstein presents the story of the canal's construction against the larger tableau of America in the first quarter-century of the 1800s. Examining the social, political, and economic ramifications of this mammoth project, Bernstein demonstrates how the canal's creation helped prevent the dismemberment of the American empire and knit the sinews of the American industrial revolution. Featuring a rich cast of characters,
including not only political visionaries like Washington, Jefferson, van Buren, and the architect's most powerful champion, Governor DeWitt Clinton, but also a huge platoon of Irish diggers as well as the canal's first travelers, Wedding of the Waters reveals that the twenty-first-century themes of urbanization, economic growth, and globalization can all be traced to the first great macroengineering venture of American history.

The New Yorker

In the early eighteen-hundreds, the wild idea began to circulate of a man-made waterway that would connect Lake Erie to the Hudson River. At the time, canals were an exciting technology. George Washington was fascinated by them, and spent his last years attempting to tame the Potomac. But geography favored New York, where the Mohawk River Valley offered a natural cut in the mountains. Bernstein’s lively account covers the political debates that surrounded the canal’s financing and choice of route, and also the tenacity of the local workers who completed the project. The inauguration, in 1825, of the Erie Canal sparked a cultural revolution as interior cities became port towns. The number of patents increased, suggesting an intellectual awakening, but there were also fears that mobility could lead to moral decline, and one paper denounced the canal as “the Big Ditch of Iniquity.”<

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Biography

Peter L. Bernstein's books include the worldwide bestseller Against the Gods: The Remarkable Story of Risk. Bernstein is also an economic consultant and publisher of Economics and Portfolio Strategy, a semimonthly letter for institutional investors.