During the first generations of European settlement in North America, a number of interconnected Northeastern families carved out private empires. In Bound by Bondage, Nicole Saffold Maskiell argues that slavery was a crucial component to the rise and enduring influence of this emergent aristocracy. Dynastic families built prestige based on shared notions of mastery, establishing sprawling manorial estates and securing cross-colonial landholdings and trading networks that stretched from the Northeast to the South, the Caribbean, and beyond. The members of this elite class were mayors, governors, senators, judges, and presidents, and they were also some of the largest slaveholders in the North. Aspirations to power and status, grounded in the political economy of human servitude, ameliorated ethnic and religious rivalries, and united once antagonistic Anglo and Dutch families, ensuring that Dutch networks endured throughout the English and then Revolutionary periods.
Using original research drawn from archives across several continents in multiple languages, Maskiell expertly traces the origin of these private familial empires back to the founding generations of the Northeastern colonies and follows their growth to the eve of the American Revolutionary War. Maskiell reveals a multiracial Early America, where enslaved traders, woodsmen, millers, maids, bakers, and groomsmen developed expansive networks of their own that challenged the power of the elites, helping in escapes, in trade, and in simple camaraderie.
In Bound by Bondage, Maskiell writes a new chapter in the history of early North America and connects developing Northern networks of merit to the invidious institution of slavery.
I’m fascinated by this work, as it’s the first I’ve found that focuses on that transition period in the Hudson Valley, from 1666-1766. This century of change witnesses the former Dutch Merchant class transform into landed gentry as the backbone of English rule. This works takes that scope and examines it through bondage, as it examines the transatlantic exchange, political upheaval, and the founding moments of great landed families of the Hudson Valley.
A strong central argument, that the Dutch New Netherlands/New York was at the epicenter of a Northern slave trading network that shaped elites culture in the colonial Northeast, and very well researched. However, the information and narrative threads are not always well laid out and can be difficult to follow