Although Chapter 4 treats Kentucky and Tennessee individually, the Chapter as a whole serves to compares Kentucky and Tennessee’s path to statehood and post-statehood policy
Category: As the Twig is Bent
6.0 The First Southwest: Tennessee and Kentucky: Why States Differ?
Why are states, even states that border each other, so different? Kentucky and Tennessee–neighboring states–Became states at exactly the same time. Yet they went in
5.9 Rise of Jefferson’s Democrat-Republican Tribe 1793-1800
Transition Politics and the National Policy System from 1793 to 1800: Effects on Economic Development Washington, Hamilton and the core Federalist Tribe had attempted during
5.8 Washington’s Valley Forge in City-Building: Introducing Developmental Infrastructure Financing
1792 Serious efforts were made to extend the Patowmack Canal to link up with Georgetown, and Washington pressed hard to build a stone bridge across
5.7 Washington as City-Builder: the Federal City 1790-91
Early Republic MED Context and Strategies The Formative Years of the Early Republic (1790-1870) Population Migration, City-Building, Cultural Diffusion: the Early Republic Big City Paradigm
5.3 Hamilton Launches His Economic System: the Public Credit and Residency Acts
Module 2 Hamilton Launches His Economic System: Cracks Appear in the Federalist Tribe Consensus (First) Report on Public Credit Everybody knows Hamilton created the National