3.2 THE NEW
ENGLAND
FOREST
The Seventeenth Century:
1600 - 1730
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2. Overview
- Weeks 1 and 2:
- Concepts for doing
environmental history.
- How environmental
historians
describe the
process of breakdown of native cultures (Gutierrez, Martin, and
Isenberg).
- Week 3:
- Concept of wilderness.
- Human place in nature.
- Process of forest
transformation under colonization.
Logging labor.
3. 17th Century Cosmos
- Great Chain of Being:
Microcosm,
Macrocosm
theory; body, soul, spirit.
- Lowest: stones, metals,
minerals
(often thought
of as alive).
- Middle: plants, mammals,
rational humans.
- Highest: Angels (nine
levels).
- God: Empyrean heaven.
4. Mark Stoll
- Texas Tech University
- Environmental history.
- Protestantism,
Capitalism,
and Nature in
America (1997).
- In Major Problems: "Puritan
Perspectives on
the New England Environment." (Ch. 3)
5. Anne Bradstreet
- Poet, 1612-72.
- Born in England. Came to
America
with John
Winthrop.
- Settled in Ipswich.
- The Tenth Muse, 1650.
- Eulogizes nature.
- Nature is green and
beautiful,
yet dies.
- Man grows old, but was made
for
immortality.
6. Edward Johnson, 1598-1672
- Migrated to New England with
John Winthrop.
Occupation was a joiner.
- Wonder Working Providence
of
Sion's Saviour
in New England (1654).
- Wilderness as a refuge from
the
Antichrist.
- "The hideous Thickets in
this place were such that Wolfes and Beares nurst up their young, in those very places where
the streets are [now] full of Girles and Boys sporting up and down."
- "Nor could it be imagined that this wilderness should turn a mart for Merchants in so short a space."
7. Cotton Mather
- Cotton Mather, Puritan
Minister.
- Christian Philosopher,
1721.
- Scale of nature: orders of
angels upward to
disembodied mind of God.
- Newtonian world machine:
world
as a machine
operating by divine law.
- God's will upholds creation.
- Farmer adds nitre
(saltpeter) to
soil; water
vapor circulates through heavens.
8. Samuel Willard
- Samuel Willard, Harvard
vice-president, 1701-7.
- "A Complete Body of
Divinity,"
1726.
- Farmer's place within the
Great
Chain of Being;
within the macrocosm.
- Heavens distill spirits and
vapors onto the
earth; earth receives them; farmer tills and manures the ground;
creates
soil fertility.
- Seed draws in the spirits,
dew,
rain.
9. Capital, Labor, and Nature
- Karl Marx: land, labor, and
capital.
- Labor as the link between
capital and nature.
One owns only their labor power.
- Exploitation of nature
(natural
resources).
- Exploitation of labor (human
resources).
- Profit through
capitalization
(entrepreneurs).
- Alienated versus unalienated
labor.
- Capital from England; labor
by
colonists;
natural resources from the New World.
- Long distance trade
(mercantile
capitalism)
links the continents.
10. Commodification of Nature
- Market links:
- Use value:
- Exchange value:
- Commodity:
- Nature as commodity:
- Resource:17th cent:
- Resource:19th cent:
- Triangular trade
- Subsistence
- Profit
- Goods, land, money
- Beaver pelts, white pine
masts,
naval stores
- To rise again, gift
- Timber unfelled, etc.
11. John Denham, Of Old Age,
1669
- Resources are gifts of the
earth
to humankind;
reciprocity.
- "For whatsoever from our
hand
she [the earth]
takes, Greater or less, a vast return she makes. Nor am I only pleased
with that resource."
12. Resource
- Latin: resurgere. To arise
again
- French: resourdre. To arise
anew; to spring
up as water.
- English:
- Something that lies ready
for
use or can be
drawn upon; wealth, assets, property.
- Something that a country or
state has and
can use to its advantage, as in natural resources.
13. John Yeats, Natural History
of Commerce,
1870
- Resources as "latent
elements of
wealth."
- "In speaking of the natural
resources of any
country, we refer to the ore in the mine, the stone unquarried, the
timber
unfelled, the native plants and animals."
14. Marketing Nature
- Transformation from organic
(medieval) economy
to inorganic (modern) economy.
- Colonists need manufactured
items from Europe:
- tools; axes; glass windows.
- Iron: guns, ammunition,
spades, kettles
- Food: sugar, salt, coffee,
tea, spices.
- Clothing: cloth, blankets,
stockings, leather
goods, hats.
- Colonists need resources to
trade:
- 4 F's: Furs, fish, forest,
farm products.
15. Trade Routes: 1650
- Molasses, sugar, rum, wine
- White oak staves
- Red oak staves
- Mast logs
- Fish
16. Piscataqua River, N.H.
- Portsmouth, N.H.
- Mast Landing.
- By 1700: 90 sawmills; 30
teams
of oxen.
- 3-4 ships with masts per
year.
- Tar, pitch, spars, yards,
staves.
17. Saw Mill
- Technological link between
labor
and nature.
- Water power--renewable
energy
source from
snowmelt and rainfall.
- Mill owner wealthier than
most
villagers.
18. George Tate House
- Fore River, in Stroudwater,
near
Portland,
Maine.
- Mast agent for British
contractor.
- Timber merchant.
- House built 1755.
19. Maine Lumbering
20. Broad Arrow Policy
- British Crown, 1691-1729.
- Retain pines over 24 in. at
1
ft. height.
- Military supremacy.
- Forest conservation.
- Contention between British
and
colonists.
- King's agent is Surveyor of
Pines and Timber.
21. Maine Lumbering
- Labor process
- Bedding the fall
- Felling
22. Lumbering and Labor
- Class distinctions:
- King's mast agent, timber
merchant, foreman,
contractor.
- Lumberers: skilled laborers.
- Cutters, barkers, swampers,
teamsters, drivers,
raftsmen, scalers, sawyers.
23. Maine Lumbering
- Limbing, barking: cutters,
barkers
- Twitching: swampers,
teamsters
24. Maine Lumbering
- Baulking: teamsters
- Mast Landing: drivers,
raftsmen
25. Forest Capital and Logging Labor
- Jeremy Belknap, History
of
New Hampshire (1784-92).
- "The contractors and agents
made
large fortunes;
but the laborers who spend their time in the woods anticipated their
earnings
and were kept in a state of poverty and dependence."
- Creates a class of exploited
laborers who
live on credit.
26. Forest Capital and Logging Labor
- Timothy Dwight, Yale
President, Travels
in New England, 1823.
- "Those who are lumbermen are
almost necessarily
poor. Their course of life seduces them to prodigality, thoughtlessness
of future wants, profaneness, irreligion, immoderate drinking and other
ruinous habits."
27. Forest Capital and Logging Labor
- Edward Kendall, Travels
in
the Years 1807
and 1808.
- "Maine settlers have
degenerated
into lumberers.
The lumberer wanders through the forest, making spoil of the wealth of
nature. What nature has planted he enjoys, but he plants nothing for
himself."
28. Forest Capital and Logging Labor
- Karl Marx, Capital,
1860s.
- Structural split between
capital
and labor.
Laborer is part of the process of appropriating nature for profit.
- Laborer adds value to the
free
timber that
nature has produced. Alienated labor.
- The merchant takes the added
value and sells
it at a profit.
29. Logging Issues Today
- Richard White, environmental
historian, Stanford
University.
- Author of "Are You an
Environmentalist or
Do You Work for a Living?" (From a bumper sticker in Forks,Washington),
in Uncommon Ground, ed. William Cronon, 1995.
30. Richard White
- Separation between those who
labor in the
environment and environmentalists.
- Until now most humans have
known
nature through
the body.
- Environmentalists know
nature
through the
mind, aesthetics, and recreation.
- Removal of connection to
nature
through labor.
31. Intellectuals and Environment
- Richard White as Professor
of
Environmental
History:
- My computer depends on
electricity; paper.
- Electricity comes from dams
on
the Columbia
River; paper from trees.
- Dams depend on rivers, snow,
nature.
- Dams kill fish; paper kills
trees.
- "I seem to alter nothing in
nature, but I
do not face what I alter; I learn nothing."
32. Questions for Discussion
- Are there acceptable ways to
work in and for
the environment that are not elitist?
- Are unalienated labor and
environmentally
sustainable work possible? In our society?
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