Read Conceived in Liberty Online
Authors: Murray N. Rothbard
Wheelwright, Rev. John,
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Whitaker, Rev. Alexander,
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White, Fr. Andrew,
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Whitehead, Samuel,
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Whitfield, Rev. Henry,
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Wilbur, Shadrach,
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Will (slave),
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Willard, Rev. Samuel,
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Willet, Samuel,
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William and Mary of Orange,
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Williams, Ann,
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Williams, Roger,
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Willoughby, Francis,
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Wilson, George,
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Wilson, Rev. John,
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Winslow, Josiah,
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Winthrop, Lucy,
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Winthrop, Martha,
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Winthrop, Stephen,
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Wise, Rev. John,
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Wood, Abraham,
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Woodruff, John,
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Wright, Louis B.,
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Wyatt, Francis,
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York, Duke of;
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James II
Youngs, Rev. John,
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Copyright © 1999 by the Ludwig von Mises Institute, 518 West Magnolia Avenue, Auburn, Alabama 36832-4528. The first edition was published in 1975 by Arlington House, Publishers.
All rights reserved. Written permission must be secured from the publisher to use or reproduce any part of this book, except for brief quotations in critical reviews or articles.
ISBN: 0-945466-26-9
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By Liberty, I understand the power which every man has over his own actions, and his right to enjoy the fruit of his labour, art, and industry, as far as by it he hurts not the society, or any members of it, by taking from any member, or by hindering him from enjoying what he himself enjoys. The fruits of a man’s honest industry are the just rewards of it, ascertained to him by natural and eternal equity, as is his title to use them in the manner which he thinks fit: And thus, with the above limitations, every man is sole lord and arbiter of his own private actions and property....
Indeed, Liberty is the divine source of all human happiness. To possess, in security, the effects of our industry, is the most powerful and reasonable incitement to be industrious: And to be able to provide for our children, and to leave them all that we have, is the best motive to beget them. But where property is precarious, labour will languish. The privileges of thinking, saying, and doing what we please, and of growing as rich as we can, without any other restriction, than that by all this we hurt not the public, nor one another, are the glorious privileges of Liberty; and its effects, to live in freedom, plenty, and safety....
Alas! Power encroaches daily upon Liberty, with a success too evident; and the balance between them is almost lost. Tyranny has engrossed almost the whole earth, and striking at mankind root and branch, makes the world a slaughterhouse....
Cato’s Letters
INTRODUCTION The Colonies in the Eighteenth Century
PART I
Developments in the Separate Colonies
1. Liberalism in Massachusetts
3. Libertarianism in Rhode Island
4. Land Tenure and Land Allocation in New England
9. Land Conflicts in New Jersey
12. Pennsylvania: Quakers and Indians
13. The Emergence of Benjamin Franklin
16. The Virginia Political Structure
19. Indian War in North Carolina
20. The North Carolina Proprietary
21. Royal Government in North Carolina
23. Proprietary Rule in South Carolina
24. The Land Question in South Carolina
25. Georgia: The “Humanitarian” Colony
PART II
Intercolonial Developments
26. Inflation and the Creation of Paper Money
27. The Communication of Ideas: Postal Service and the Freedom of the Press
28. Religious Trends in the Colonies
31. The Quakers and the Abolition of Slavery
32. The Beginning of the Struggle over American Bishops
33. The Growth of Libertarian Thought
PART III
Relations with Britain
37. Early Phases of the French and Indian War
38. The Persecution of the Acadians
40. The American Colonies and the War
42. Administering the Conquests
What! Another American history book? The reader may be pardoned for wondering about the point of another addition to the seemingly inexhaustible flow of books and texts on American history. One problem, as pointed out in the bibliographical essay at the end of Volume I, is that the survey studies of American history have squeezed out the actual stuff of history, the narrative facts of the important events of the past. With the true data of history squeezed out, what we have left are compressed summaries and the historian’s interpretations and judgments of the data. There is nothing wrong with the historian’s having such judgments; indeed, without them, history would be a meaningless and giant almanac listing dates and events with no causal links. But, without the narrative facts, the reader is deprived of the data from which he can himself judge the historian’s interpretations and evolve interpretations of his own. A major point of this and the other volumes is to put back the historical narrative into American history.
Facts, of course, must be selected and ordered in accordance with judgments of importance, and such judgments are necessarily tied into the historian’s basic world outlook. My own basic perspective on the history of man, and
a fortiori
on the history of the United States, is to place central importance on the great conflict which is eternally waged between Liberty and Power, a conflict, by the way, which was seen with crystal clarity by the American revolutionaries of the eighteenth century. I see the liberty of the individual not only as a great moral good in itself (or, with Lord Acton, as the highest political good), but also as the necessary condition for the flowering of all the other goods that mankind cherishes: moral virtue, civilization, the arts and sciences, economic prosperity. Out of liberty, then, stem the glories of civilized life. But liberty has always been threatened by the encroachments of power, power which seeks to suppress, control, cripple, tax, and exploit the
fruits of liberty and production. Power, then, the enemy of liberty, is consequently the enemy of all the other goods and fruits of civilization that mankind holds dear. And power is almost always centered in and focused on that central repository of power and violence: the state. With Albert Jay Nock, the twentieth-century American political philosopher, I see history as centrally a race and conflict between “social power”—the productive consequence of voluntary interactions among men—and state power. In those eras of history when liberty—social power—has managed to race ahead of state power and control, the country and even mankind have flourished. In those eras when state power has managed to catch up with or surpass social power, mankind suffers and declines.