World Ports and the Mariner

World Ports and the Mariner
Title World Ports and the Mariner PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages 1310
Release 1959
Genre Harbors
ISBN

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World Ports and the Mariner

World Ports and the Mariner
Title World Ports and the Mariner PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages 1366
Release 1961
Genre Harbors
ISBN

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World Ports

World Ports
Title World Ports PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages 750
Release 1982
Genre Harbors
ISBN

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Includes section "Laws, regulations and rules affecting wharves, warehouses and cargo."

The Rime of the Ancient Mariner

The Rime of the Ancient Mariner
Title The Rime of the Ancient Mariner PDF eBook
Author Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Publisher
Pages 184
Release 1900
Genre Poetry
ISBN

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World Ports

World Ports
Title World Ports PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages 1064
Release 1926
Genre Harbors
ISBN

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Notice to Mariners

Notice to Mariners
Title Notice to Mariners PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages 124
Release 2003
Genre Notices to mariners
ISBN

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With Sails Whitening Every Sea

With Sails Whitening Every Sea
Title With Sails Whitening Every Sea PDF eBook
Author Brian Rouleau
Publisher Cornell University Press
Pages 321
Release 2015-05-06
Genre History
ISBN 0801455073

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Many Americans in the Early Republic era saw the seas as another field for national aggrandizement. With a merchant marine that competed against Britain for commercial supremacy and a whaling fleet that circled the globe, the United States sought a maritime empire to complement its territorial ambitions in North America. In With Sails Whitening Every Sea, Brian Rouleau argues that because of their ubiquity in foreign ports, American sailors were the principal agents of overseas foreign relations in the early republic. Their everyday encounters and more problematic interactions—barroom brawling, sexual escapades in port-city bordellos, and the performance of blackface minstrel shows—shaped how the United States was perceived overseas.Rouleau details both the mariners' "working-class diplomacy" and the anxieties such interactions inspired among federal authorities and missionary communities, who saw the behavior of American sailors as mere debauchery. Indiscriminate violence and licentious conduct, they feared, threatened both mercantile profit margins and the nation's reputation overseas. As Rouleau chronicles, the world's oceans and seaport spaces soon became a battleground over the terms by which American citizens would introduce themselves to the world. But by the end of the Civil War, seamen were no longer the nation's principal ambassadors. Hordes of wealthy tourists had replaced seafarers, and those privileged travelers moved through a world characterized by consolidated state and corporate authority. Expanding nineteenth-century America's master narrative beyond the water's edge, With Sails Whitening Every Sea reveals the maritime networks that bound the Early Republic to the wider world.