
A brief, rescued fragment of James Fenimore Cooper’s final, unfinished project offers a vivid portrait of early New York’s transformation from a modest settlement into one of the world’s foremost commercial centers. In clear, measured prose he outlines the city’s natural advantages—its protected harbor, strategic location, and the infrastructure that turned Manhattan into a bustling market hub. The introduction reads like a snapshot of a city on the brink of greatness, cataloguing the factors that propelled its rapid ascent.
Cooper also turns his eye to the broader state, tracing population growth and economic expansion from the post‑Revolutionary peace of 1785 onward. He juxtaposes New York’s modest beginnings with the dramatic surge that would soon eclipse even the most populous New England states. Written amid the turmoil of the Civil War, his observations carry a quiet urgency, hinting at the nation’s challenges while celebrating the city’s emerging destiny.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (72K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2001-01-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1789–1851
One of the first major American novelists, he helped define the adventure story with sweeping frontier tales, sea novels, and the unforgettable Leatherstocking series. His books brought early American landscapes and conflicts to readers around the world.
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by James Fenimore Cooper

by James Fenimore Cooper

by James Fenimore Cooper

by James Fenimore Cooper

by James Fenimore Cooper

by James Fenimore Cooper

by James Fenimore Cooper

by James Fenimore Cooper