“I am not so simple to think that ever any motive than wealth will ever erect there a Commonwealth…”
- John Smith, A Description of New England (1616)
“The Plymouth story, serving as America’s default founding myth, derives its power from the fact that it reflects what America wants to be, how it wants to see itself and be seen. But in its popular conception the story is misleading because there is one major feature of American life that has been often left out, ignored, overlooked, or downplayed. Commerce. Business. Enterprise…Looking back, we see that business and business people played a critical role in creating and establishing the earliest American settlements, laws, and civic institutions. Even the Pilgrims, those paragons of virtue, were funded by merchants, entrepreneurs, business leaders – both great and modest – and were organized as a commercial enterprise. Without the funding and the backing of a business organization, albeit a badly managed one, the Pilgrims might never have left Leiden…”
- John Butman & Simon Targett, New World, Inc.
New World, Inc. starts with a very simple premise and ends up striking a surprisingly rich vein of history. The stated purpose given by John Butman & Simon Targett is to revise our concept of America’s founding. The schoolhouse story, the one that every American kid learns at some point, is that the Pilgrims came to present-day New England’s shores in search of religious freedom, and that once here, their intent was to build, in John Winthrop’s phrase, a “city upon a hill,” built for God’s glory. In reality, Great Britain’s colonization of the eastern seaboard of North America resulted from a long line of risky business decisions, in which high risks (up to and including your death and/or disappearance) promised high rewards (land and timber, silver and gold, furs and fish). This goes as well for the Pilgrims who, as Butman & Targett note, had all the religious freedom they wanted in Holland. What they did not have was jobs.
In all honesty, New World, Inc. did not grip me with its thesis. A new interpretation of American history meant to celebrate businessmen? Really? As we linger in the long shadow of the Great Recession, the last thing I’m looking to do is pay homage to investors and speculators. The book’s first lines (“This story begins with sheep”) also did not act as a natural hook. Businessmen and sheep. Where is this going?
Exciting places, actually.
New World, Inc. begins in the 1550s, at a time when Great Britain was not yet the sprawling global empire upon which the sun never set. To the contrary, it was a politically tumultuous backwater that relied heavily on the woolen cloth industry (hence, the sheep). And that industry was in decline. Meanwhile, Spain and Portugal were the two superpowers dominating world trade. Just in case you doubted them, they actually signed a treaty (the Treaty of Tordesillas) dividing the New World between them. The Pope even signed off on it.
It was in these bleak times that a small group of English merchants got together and formed…a joint stock company! (I know, be still, my heart). This company, pithily named The Mysterie, Company, and Fellowship of Merchant Adventurers for the Discovery of Regions, Dominions, Islands, and Places Unknown, set its sights on finding new trading partners and new trading markets. At first, they looked to the east, towards China. While sailing the Northeast Passage, they ended up opening relations with Russia, then ruled by a pre-terrible Ivan the Terrible. Eventually, the gaze of the China-focused company turned westward, in hopes of finding the fabled “Northwest Passage” that would deliver them to Cathay.
When I review a history book, it helps to be upfront about how familiar I am with a subject before I read the first page. In this case, I knew very little. Early North American history is not my forte (I only really start paying attention around the beginning of the French & Indian War). I have read a couple books about the Pilgrims (including Philbrick’s Mayflower), I know a bit about John Smith (watching Pocahontas with my kids counts, right?), and I’ve heard of Sir Francis Drake and Walter Raleigh (spelled Ralegh, here), but otherwise, most of this subject is new to me.
For instance, I had never heard of Hugh Willoughby, who led an eastward expedition to Cathay in 1553. Three hundred years before Sir John Franklin’s doomed polar expedition, Willoughby tried to spend the winter in an inlet to the Barents Sea and ended up freezing to death with all his men. Or Martin Frobisher, a sometimes-privateer who led three expeditions in search of the Northwest Passage; he brought back to England tons of ore (which never yielded appreciable gold) and one Inuit man, whom he kidnapped (poisoning relations immediately).
These tales were not what I had expected. Indeed, I had partly feared this would be a dry explanation of 16th century financial instruments, or a treatise on mercantilism. It most certainly is not. Instead, this is a rousing, engrossingly written, fast-paced account of an age of English exploration that turned Great Britain into an overriding force in world history. Sure, you learn a bit about charters and patents, but there is also daring seamanship, court intrigue, and a great assemblage of characters, a compilation of pirates, adventurers, gamblers, and dreamers. There is Drake vs. the Spaniards, the “lost colony” of Roanoke, and John Smith and the founding of Jamestown.
This could have been a complex topic, especially for a newcomer. There are a lot of names to remember, a lot of allegiances to keep straight. The reign of Elizabeth I, for instances, can fill entire volumes. Here, Butman and Targett have to simplify without being simplistic, and they manage that trick quite nicely. This is only 316 pages of text, yet it felt complete. This is a testament to the authors’ keen grasp of their narrative.
New World, Inc. is greatly helped by a couple things that I feel should be required in most history books. First, there is a “cast of characters,” that give names and descriptions of the personages covered by the text. This is super helpful, especially if you’re like me and relatively new to this slice of the past. Whenever I got my Cecils confused, I could just flip to the front and recall the difference between William and Robert. Second, there is a chronology at the end. Between these two value add-ons, you really can’t get lost. In terms of illustrations, New World, Inc. includes an inset of full-color plates, which is also a nice touch. The only thing I would have wanted was more maps. There is a master map printed on the paste-down, which is handy in its own way (you know exactly where to find it). However, there are a lot of specific voyages chronicled here, and it would have been nice to have some of them mapped.
A book like New World, Inc. always runs the risk of attempting to prove too much. Butman & Targett do a good job of suggesting a new way of looking at the early settlement of North America without imposing a monolithic framework. There are definite limits to their storytelling. Particularly, the deep and tragic impact of colonization on the Indians living on the continent are only hinted at. Overall, though, there is not much to complain about. The best history books are both well-researched and well-written. New World, Inc. sits at that intersection.
There is a classic scene from The Simpsons when Homer and Mr. Burns are snowbound in a cabin, drinking champagne together. “You know, Mr. Burns,” Homer says, as his boss fills his flute, “You’re the richest guy I know.” “Ah yes,” Mr. Burns breezily replies, “But I’d trade it all for a little more.”
I thought of that line while finishing up the last few pages. It seems apt. A group of wealthy, successful people of business, risking their fortunes, their reputations, sometimes their lives, all for the chance at a little bit more. In doing so, they helped nudge the course of history.
I received a copy of this book from the publisher in exchange for an honest review.