Fashioning Insurrection

From Imperial Resistance To American Orientalisms

About the Exhibit

Ode Presented by the Carrier of the Columbian Centinel

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Letterpress print
Boston, Massachusetts: Benjamin Russell, January 1, 1819
Brown University Library, Harris Collection


This broadside offers a two-column ode to its American readers surveying current events abroad and at home. Two regions at the heart of this exhibit take a prime spot in this installment’s reporting: American naval prowess in North Africa against Barbary States, as well as the “British fight against Mahrattas and Hindoos” who opposed the spread of the BEIC. Concerning the latter event in particular, the author laments, “On foreign lands we will no longer roam; Well pleas’d, to view our happier state at home.” Not only did these imperial conflicts interrupt American travel but exorbitant protective tariffs and the rise in cotton textile manufacturers in the United States and Europe also caused a decline in India trade. However, luxury imports from India, such as Kashmir shawls and raw materials like indigo, animal hides and saltpeter, continued to remain valuable commodities in the United States into the mid-nineteenth century.