The Economy of British West Florida, 1763-1783
310 pages, 6 x 9
10 tables - 1 map
Paperback
Release Date:28 Jun 2002
ISBN:9780817311919
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The Economy of British West Florida, 1763-1783

University of Alabama Press
"Highly recommended." —CHOICE

This is the first book-length investigation of the economy of British West Florida and the extent to which it was economically viable given that it had been an economic failure for Spain. In it, author Robin Fabel explores both the territory's economy and history but also analyzes previously neglected but key aspects of British West Florida, including the maritime life of the province, the institution of slavery, and the potentially great immigration scheme sponsored by the Company of Military Adventures.

The British divided Florida into two colonies: East Florida and West Florida. West Florida comprised the area between the Apalachicola, Chattahoochee, and Mississippi rivers, and from the Gulf of Mexico north to thirty-two degrees twenty-eight minutes north latitude, roughly the latitude of modern-day Jackson, MS and Montgomery, AL. In the geographic center of the colony were Mobile, Alabama and Pensacola, Floriday. British West Florida included parts of the states of Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, and Mississippi and existed from 1763 until 1783 at the end of the American Revolutionary War. 

Fabel contrasts the founding of Georgia, where slaves were initially excluded, with West Florida, where the slave trade became important economically. The British believed that only enslaved Blacks could labor successfully in the hot climate. Fabel gives an account of how owners employed enslaved people, how rare it was for slaves to be emancipated, and the passage of slave laws for West Florida. Fabel also explores British West Florida’s trade with Native Americans and the Caribbean islands, as well as the colony's relationships with neighboring Spanish and French communities.

Fabel's work offers an engaging and accessible account of the history of an expansive region of colonial North America during a fluid period of colonial history before American independence.

 
Acquired by Britain at the end of the French and Indian War, West Florida (including parts of present Georgia, Alabama, and Mississippi, as well as the Florida Panhandle) remained a British colony uintil the end of the American Revolution . . .This first full-length study of the area's economy . . . is also good social history. Intensive research and a straight-forward style make this an excellent book. Highly recommended.'
—CHOICE
Highly recommended to anyone interested in the British years in West Florida. It is an excellent study.' —Florida Historical Quarterly

Robin F.A. Fabel is Associate Professor of History, Auburn University.

Acknowledgments IX
Introduction
I. Immigration 6
2. Blacks in West Florida 22
3. The Indian and Caribbean Trade 49
4. Trading with the Spanish Empire 75
5. Plantation Life 110
6. The Maritime Life of the Province 126
7. The Company of Military Adventurers 153
8. Conclusion 198
Appendix r: Maritime Traffic, 1763-1778 2II
Appendix 2: Deerskin Prices, 1768-1778 212
Appendix 3: Agents for Military Adventurers 213
Appendix 4: Slave Transactions, 1764-1779 214
Appendix 5: Imports to Britain from Florida, 1773-1775 237
Notes 238
Bibliographic Essay 269
Index 279
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