How the States Got Their Shapes Too: The People Behind the Borderlines

Author:   Mark Stein
Publisher:   Smithsonian Books (DC)
ISBN:  

9781588343147


Pages:   348
Publication Date:   07 June 2011
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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How the States Got Their Shapes Too: The People Behind the Borderlines


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Author:   Mark Stein
Publisher:   Smithsonian Books (DC)
Imprint:   Smithsonian Books (DC)
Dimensions:   Width: 16.00cm , Height: 3.00cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.590kg
ISBN:  

9781588343147


ISBN 10:   1588343146
Pages:   348
Publication Date:   07 June 2011
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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<p>Booklist <p>Stein's How the States Got Their Shapes (2008) described why the American states look the way they do--how their borders landed where they did. This equally informative follow-up puts the spotlight on the people responsible for shaping those borders. People like Roger Williams, the Puritan minister who was expelled from the Massachusetts Bay Colony for advocating against the Church of England and established the township of Providence at the tip of the bay, and Anne Hutchinson, also banished, who secured the rights to a small island called Aquidneck by the Indians and Rhode Island by the British. Or--and this is a curious one--Robert Jenkins, the sea captain whose severed ear played a key role in establishing the boundary between Florida and Georgia. Stein, a playwright and screenwriter, writes history the way it should be written, as an entertaining story and not merely a tedious list of names, dates, and places. This is a very interesting follow-up to the earliern


<p>Library Journal <br><p>Stein, Mark. How the States Got Their Shapes Too: The People Behind the Borderlines. Smithsonian. Jun. 2011. c.360p. illus. maps. index. ISBN 9781588343147. $24.95. HIST <br>In an evocative sequel to his popular How the States Got Their Shapes, Stein presents a plentitude of varied and compelling biographical sketches associated with the setting of our national boundaries. The personalities, both the notable (e.g., Thomas Jefferson, Daniel Webster, Ethan Allen, Charles Mason, and Jeremiah Dixon) and the more obscure (Zebulon Butler, Clara Nichols, John Meares) and their agendas are central to the book. Readers are reminded that under President James K. Polk, U.S. boundaries grew exponentially to include Texas and all lands between the Rockies and the Pacific, producing a colossal headache for Congress and a dilemma largely solved by such outsize local personalities as Sam Houston and Brigham Young. The author also treats lands we attempted to annex but lost


<p>KIRKUS REVIEWS<br>A fun sequel offers more recondite tidbits of American history.<p>With 50 states, there are plenty of details about border controversies for this mildly titillating follow-up to screenwriter Stein's How the States Got Their Shapes (2008), which in turn inspired the History Channel's eponymous documentary. The personalities behind the disputes take center stage: Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon, who were actually a pair of highly accomplished English surveyors of the Royal Society possibly hired by Benjamin Franklin to establish impartially the disputed 300-mile Pennsylvania-Maryland-Delaware boundary. Asking Mason and Dixon to survey a boundary in America, writes the author, was... akin to asking Mozart to play at a prom. Thanks to Ethan Allen ( not a furniture maker ) and his motley posse of Green Mountain Boys, the homesteads making up the future Vermont were saved from rapacious New Yorkers. It is largely due to the zeal (or wealth) of John Hardeman Walker


Author Information

MARK STEIN is a playwright and screenwriter. His plays have been performed off-Broadway and at theaters throughout the country. His films include Housesitter with Steve Martin and Goldie Hawn. Stein has also taught writing and drama at American University and Catholic University. His previous book, How the States Got Their Shapes, a New York Times bestseller, was the basis for The History Channel's documentary of the same name.

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