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Toussaint's Clause: The Founding Fathers and the Haitian Revolution (Adst-Dacor Diplomats and Diplomacy Book)

ePub Toussaint's Clause: The Founding Fathers and the Haitian Revolution (Adst-Dacor Diplomats and Diplomacy Book) by Gordon S. Brown in History

Description

A manual dedicated to recreating the brewed beverages that existed in the American Colonies. All of the historic recipes were documented as dating from 1800 or earlier; and all were taste-tested. The book consists of more than fifty recipes for ale; beer; mead; hard cider; and mixed drinks; including an award winning recipe for porter. Along with the recipes is a how-to chapter on brewing. There is an additional chapter on non-alcoholic brews; such as tea and coffee; and herbalsubstitutes for both. Plus; a section on making non-alcoholic beer; and carbonated soft drinks.


#756788 in Books University Press of Mississippi 2005-02-01Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 9.28 x 1.05 x 6.40l; 1.46 #File Name: 1578067111321 pages


Review
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful. American policy debates are the stars of this workBy JRonScholars; novelists; and playwrights have examined the slave revolt that violently and abruptly ousted the French plantation system on the Caribbean island of Saint-Domingue during the 1790s from the viewpoint of the slaves; in the context of the French Revolution; through the eyes of the charismatic leader Toussaint Louverture; and from other perspectives. Treatment of U.S. foreign policy toward the embattled colony has received chapters and articles within larger studies. Gordon S. Brown; however; commits a full-length study of American policy toward Saint-Domingue in his accessible work; Toussaint's Clause: The Founding Fathers and the Haitian Revolution (Jackson: University Press of Mississippi; 2005).Brown's thesis is straightforward: competing U.S. economic interests between northern merchants and shippers and southern slaveholders "determined the main lines of America's Haitian policy" (6). He sustains this economic view throughout the work while introducing the reader to the myriad of American; Dominguan; French; and British voices that influenced the resulting and fluctuating policies. Brown handles the complexities of U.S-Dominguan diplomacy while never losing focus on the overriding economic determinants. Toussaint's Clause follows the chronology of events and provides the reader a firm overview of the revolution; which lasted from 1791 to 1804.Internal American policy debates are the stars of this work. Brown's use of primary source correspondence and extended quotes reveals how early American power players like Washington; Adams; Jefferson; Hamilton; Madison; and Timothy Pickering confront the issues of domestic politics; southern slavery; and the French Revolution. He highlights the influence of French ministers and touchy relations with Great Britain on American thinking toward the island. Brown concludes that U.S.-Dominguan trade played an important role in almost every policy discussion of what to do about the rebel slaves.Though three presidential administrations enacted different policies toward Saint-Domingue; one thing is clear from Brown's work: at least one administration maintained a full-fledged foreign policy with an island of black ex-slaves some 65 years before the end of slavery in America. John Adams and his cabinet maintained diplomatic correspondence with Louverture; provided the black regime financial assistance; and the nascent U.S. navy engaged the forces of Louverture's Dominguan rival Andre Rigaud during a hostile struggle for Saint-Dominguan leadership. Brown explains eighteenth-century American diplomatic involvement with a black colony in terms of international politics and trade economics. A primary force behind the policy was careful consideration of its implications for northern merchants and its impact for southern slaveholders. The work helps us better understand the importance of trade and slaves (as commodities and laborers) in the early republican economy.Only one other author has written a monograph that primarily examines U.S. foreign policy toward the French slave colony Saint-Domingue. Tim Matthewson's A Proslavery Foreign Policy: Haitian-American Relations during the Early Republic highlights the role of slavery in the political thinking of American policymakers. Brown's Toussaint's Clause addresses the discussion of economic interests in America's Dominguan diplomacy. Economics and slavery are important policy factors in U.S.-Dominguan relations. They are not; however; the only ones. More remains to be written on American diplomatic relations with the black regime of Saint-Domingue.Brown's book does not do a lot of things; such as delve into the intricacies of the French Revolution; provide an in-depth understanding of Louverture's valor; or examine slave life on Saint-Domingue. Other works; however; speak to those subjects. The contribution that Brown makes is crafting a readable historical narrative which illuminates the role of the United States; not as only player in the revolution of black Dominguans; but as part of a cast of more powerful global actors. Toussaint's Clause is not heavily sourced and would be a useful tool for undergraduate students and general readers. Anyone who reads the book will be a step closer to understanding why a nation whose governmental leadership included white slaveholders would finance and assist a regime of black ex-slaves in their quest for independence. For one book; that is no small feat.3 of 3 people found the following review helpful. Excellent Overview of Haitian-US-French RelationsBy H. CampbellThis book is an excellent summary of the domestic and international politics at play in the ongoing drama of the 1790-1804 revolution in St. Domingo (the name for what later became Haiti.) The author describes the southern fears of American slaves being inspired to revolt like the St. Domingans and how these fears tempered the sentiments of key Revolutionary fathers like slave-owning Thomas Jefferson; who for some reason continues to get a free ride from modern historians despite his clear and balatant racism. The book to a lesser extent is concerned with developments in Revolutionary France; but provides enough background to appreciate what was happening on the island itself. The primary concern of the US in the beginning was trade and profit with the revolting slaves. Later; when relations with France became tense as a result of naval insults to our merchant vessels; passive support for the rebels became a key component of America's strategy. Later still; when it seemed that Napoleon had grand designs for a North American Empire centered in Louisiana; prolonging the ongoing quagmire in St. Domingo served the purpose of exhausting French resources to the point the ambitious First Consul threw up his hands and sold the young Republic a huge swath of land that began our Manifest Destiny. After the French withdrew from Haiti; US interest dissolved; with no enthusiasm at all for recognizing the first example of blacks overthrowing their white owners. Indeed; not until after our Civil War started did this country finally and formally recognize Haiti as an independent state (some 40 years after France itself did so.)All in all; a must have for any student of the early American and French Republics; the Napoleonic Wars; Haiti or slavery.7 of 8 people found the following review helpful. The Infant US Politics Foreign Affairs- A Grand SurveyBy Rank amateurThis short; articulate survey of the the newborn United States' issues with the St. Domingue (the putative Haiti) touches on virtually everything: The French Revolution; the Louisiana Purchase; the early Federal-state struggles in the United States; the founding fathers' ambivalence about the institution of slavery; the often overriding role of the private sector in American diplomacy ; Caribbean piracy in the 18th and early 19th century. All of this and more seen through the lens of the Haitian slave revolt and the vagaries of the historic changes in French (and western) society engendered by the French revolution. A great read that makes one hunger for more of all the issues discussed.

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