Smuggling and Illicit Trade in British America

Illicit trade was an endemic feature of life in 17th- and 18th-century British America, shaping economies and societies from the Caribbean to Newfoundland. Owing to the illegal nature of smuggling in British America, its scale is impossible to estimate, but surviving records from traders and imperia...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rutledge, Andrew
Format: Book Part
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780199329175.013.1128
id croxfordunivpr:10.1093/acrefore/9780199329175.013.1128
record_format openpolar
spelling croxfordunivpr:10.1093/acrefore/9780199329175.013.1128 2024-09-30T14:38:56+00:00 Smuggling and Illicit Trade in British America Rutledge, Andrew 2023 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780199329175.013.1128 en eng Oxford University Press Oxford Research Encyclopedia of American History ISBN 9780199329175 reference-entry 2023 croxfordunivpr https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780199329175.013.1128 2024-09-17T04:26:33Z Illicit trade was an endemic feature of life in 17th- and 18th-century British America, shaping economies and societies from the Caribbean to Newfoundland. Owing to the illegal nature of smuggling in British America, its scale is impossible to estimate, but surviving records from traders and imperial officials testify to the determination of merchants to exchange goods and enslaved peoples across imperial borders and their success in doing so. The same was true for British Americans’ trading partners in the French, Spanish, and Dutch empires. Contraband trade was carried out in a variety of ways, ranging from open commerce in colonial ports to clandestine landings of cargoes on barren shorelines. The lives of both free and enslaved colonists were affected by it, either directly as sailors or laborers on smuggling voyages or indirectly as consumers of illegally imported goods such as tea, molasses, rum, or cloth. Most interimperial trade was labeled illegal under a series of laws known as the Navigation Acts passed between 1661 and 1696 that sought to exclude foreigners from the trade of the British Empire and ensure its products flowed to the mother country. But hampered by insufficient resources and intransigent colonial attitudes, customs agents could do little to curtail smuggling. Yet despite the arguments of some historians seeking to tie illicit trade to the coming of the American Revolution, smugglers engaged in it, seeking profits, not political or economic independence. In British North America, merchants smuggled to French and Dutch territories because the returns outweighed the risks, and because smuggling offered a means of earning the funds needed to repay their creditors in the British Isles. While in the Caribbean, island merchants enjoyed imperial support for their trade with Spanish America even as they condemned the illicit commerce of their northern cousins. Book Part Newfoundland Oxford University Press
institution Open Polar
collection Oxford University Press
op_collection_id croxfordunivpr
language English
description Illicit trade was an endemic feature of life in 17th- and 18th-century British America, shaping economies and societies from the Caribbean to Newfoundland. Owing to the illegal nature of smuggling in British America, its scale is impossible to estimate, but surviving records from traders and imperial officials testify to the determination of merchants to exchange goods and enslaved peoples across imperial borders and their success in doing so. The same was true for British Americans’ trading partners in the French, Spanish, and Dutch empires. Contraband trade was carried out in a variety of ways, ranging from open commerce in colonial ports to clandestine landings of cargoes on barren shorelines. The lives of both free and enslaved colonists were affected by it, either directly as sailors or laborers on smuggling voyages or indirectly as consumers of illegally imported goods such as tea, molasses, rum, or cloth. Most interimperial trade was labeled illegal under a series of laws known as the Navigation Acts passed between 1661 and 1696 that sought to exclude foreigners from the trade of the British Empire and ensure its products flowed to the mother country. But hampered by insufficient resources and intransigent colonial attitudes, customs agents could do little to curtail smuggling. Yet despite the arguments of some historians seeking to tie illicit trade to the coming of the American Revolution, smugglers engaged in it, seeking profits, not political or economic independence. In British North America, merchants smuggled to French and Dutch territories because the returns outweighed the risks, and because smuggling offered a means of earning the funds needed to repay their creditors in the British Isles. While in the Caribbean, island merchants enjoyed imperial support for their trade with Spanish America even as they condemned the illicit commerce of their northern cousins.
format Book Part
author Rutledge, Andrew
spellingShingle Rutledge, Andrew
Smuggling and Illicit Trade in British America
author_facet Rutledge, Andrew
author_sort Rutledge, Andrew
title Smuggling and Illicit Trade in British America
title_short Smuggling and Illicit Trade in British America
title_full Smuggling and Illicit Trade in British America
title_fullStr Smuggling and Illicit Trade in British America
title_full_unstemmed Smuggling and Illicit Trade in British America
title_sort smuggling and illicit trade in british america
publisher Oxford University Press
publishDate 2023
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780199329175.013.1128
genre Newfoundland
genre_facet Newfoundland
op_source Oxford Research Encyclopedia of American History
ISBN 9780199329175
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780199329175.013.1128
_version_ 1811641520631054336