
ACHENWALL'S OBSERVATIONS
N O R T H A M E R I C A
1767
J. G. ROSENGARTEN
ACHENWALL'S OBSERVATIONS ON NORTH AMERICA, 1767.
This translation opens a rare window onto how a mid‑century German scholar interpreted the newest reports from Benjamin Franklin. Drawing on the professor’s notes, it sketches the chilly Atlantic seaboard, the sandy stretches of Florida, and the interior lands prized for their fertile soil. The narrative turns to the peoples who first inhabited those territories, describing their appearance, languages, and the central role of maize, beans and tobacco—crops the Europeans would soon covet.
Beyond geography, the work records early observations of the Iroquois Confederacy, noting its political unity, council meetings and the uneasy relationship with colonial authorities. Though filtered through 1760s European preconceptions, the passage offers modern listeners a vivid sense of how the New World was first framed for a European audience, revealing both curiosity and misconception in equal measure.
Language
en
Duration
~39 minutes (37K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Frank van Drogen, Bernd Meyer and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2008-03-04
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1719–1772
An Enlightenment-era scholar often credited with helping turn “statistics” into a distinct field, he wrote about states, law, history, and politics in a way that shaped later social science. His work came out of the University of Göttingen, where he spent much of his academic career.
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