107,99 zł
In the summer of 1787, while delegates in Philadelphia debated the architecture of a new republic, a quieter act of nation-building unfolded in the halls of a dying Congress. On July 13, lawmakers passed the Northwest Ordinance — a document that would shape the American continent as profoundly as the Constitution itself. The Ordinance was a bold wager: that republican ideals — self-governance, civil liberty, public education, the prohibition of slavery — could be carried not merely in the hearts of men, but written into the very soil of a wilderness. The territory north and west of the Ohio River, stretching across what would become Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin, and part of Minnesota, was to be no colony of the eastern seaboard. It would be an equal partner, formed from the ground up in the image of revolutionary principles. Empire of Free Ground traces how those ideals moved across the Appalachians — through the surveyor's chain, the settler's axe, and the schoolhouse. It follows the men and communities who carried the Ordinance's compact westward: Revolutionary War veterans rewarded with land grants, settlers drawn by the promise of freehold ownership, territorial governors tasked with instantiating law in places that had known neither. It also reckons honestly with the fractures in that vision — the promises of good faith toward Indigenous nations that crumbled into a decade of wars, and the fugitive slave clause quietly embedded within an antislavery document. This is the story of a republic testing itself on open ground — the distances between its founding ideals and the realities of conquest, expansion, and human ambition.
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Liczba stron: 166
Rok wydania: 2026
