In this issue, readers will learn about the role of civilian captives in unofficial eighteenth-century diplomacy, the ways in which Second Bank of the United States president Nicholas Biddle used his professional and personal connections to contribute to the growth of the Cotton Kingdom and the forced removal of Native Americans, and Thomas Edison’s enthusiastic but ultimately unsuccessful efforts to develop a more efficient process for milling iron ore.
Contents
Articles
Two Barbary Captives: Allegiance through Self-Interest and International Networks, 1785–1796
Brett Goodin
Stephen W. Campbell
“Practically Intoxicated”: Thomas Edison and the Bechtelsville Ore-Mining Experiment
Daniel Weeks
Book Reviews