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The Road That Made America
The Road That Made America: A Modern Pilgrim's Journey on the Great Wagon Road | James Dodson
2 posts | 1 read
In the bestselling tradition of Rinker Bucks The Oregon Trail and Tony Horwitzs Confederates in the Attic, The Road That Made America is a lively, epic account of one of the greatest untold stories in our nations historythe eight-hundred-mile long Great Wagon Road that 18th-century American settlers forged from Philadelphia to Georgia that expanded the country dramatically in the decades before we ventured west. Little known today, the Great Wagon Road was the primary road of frontier America: a mass migration route that stretched more than eight hundred miles from Philadelphia to Augusta, Georgia. It opened the Southern frontier and wilderness east of the Appalachian Mountains to Americas first settlers, and later served as the gateway for the exploration of the American West. In the mid-1700s, waves of European colonists in search of land for new homes left Pennsylvania to settle in the colonial backcountry of Maryland, Virginia, and the Carolinas. More than one hundred thousand settlers made the arduous trek, those who would become the foundational generations of the worlds first true immigrant nation. In their newly formed village squares, democracy took root and bloomed. During the Revolutionary War, the road served as the key supply line to the American resistance in the western areas of the colonies, especially in the South. Drawing on years of fieldwork and scholarship by an army of archeologists, academics, archivists, preservationists, and passionate history lovers, James Dodson sets out to follow the roads original path from Philadelphia to Georgia. On his journey, he crosses six contiguous states and some of the most historic and hallowed landscapes of eastern America, touching many of the nations most sacred battlefields and burying grounds. Due to its strategic importance, military engagements were staged along the Great Wagon Road throughout North Americas three major wars, including the early days of the bloody French and Indian conflict and pivotal Revolutionary War encounters. In time, the Great Wagon Road became Americas first technology highway, as growing roadside villages and towns and cities became, in effect, the first incubators of Americas early Industrial age. The people and ideas that traveled down the road shaped the character of the fledgling nation and helped define who we are today. Dodsons ancestors on both sides took the Great Wagon Road to Maryland and North Carolina, respectively, giving him a personal stake in uncovering the roads buried legacy. An illuminating and entertaining first-person history, The Road That Made America restores this long-forgotten route to its rightful place in our national story.
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Lcsmcat
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Written by an acquaintance of my mother, this book reminds me of William Least Heat Moon‘s Blue Highways. The author has a reporter‘s gift of finding the right people to talk to and getting them to tell stories. There are editorial issues as I noted in my first post. But it was enjoyable to “listen” to people tell stories they are passionate about, learn a little history, and go on a journey with a grandfatherly author. ⬇️

Lcsmcat And for actual history of the road - he includes an extensive bibliography. 3w
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Lcsmcat
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For the most part I‘m enjoying this book about The Great Wagon Road, but I wish it had had better editing. In one place he calls the same woman by two different names in the same paragraph. In another he suggests that Washington got the plans for Fort Loudon from the Library of Congress - which wasn‘t founded until 50 years later. I _think_ he meant that the plans are currently in the Library of Congress, but that‘s not what he wrote. 🤷🏻‍♀️

Texreader Aww that‘s a shame!! 3w
bibliothecarivs I'm glad someone else points out these errors! 3w
Lcsmcat @Texreader @bibliothecarivs It‘s not a bad book, it‘s just more of a memoir of an elderly man‘s travels than a work of serious scholarship. The author spent his career writing for golf magazines. History is a hobby, and his writing style is more magazine-like, if that makes sense. 3w
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