Hollow Ground: Industry, Extraction, and Ecology in the Floodplains of Early Maryland

dc.contributor.advisorBell, Richarden_US
dc.contributor.authorHess, Sophieen_US
dc.contributor.departmentHistoryen_US
dc.contributor.publisherDigital Repository at the University of Marylanden_US
dc.contributor.publisherUniversity of Maryland (College Park, Md.)en_US
dc.date.accessioned2024-06-29T05:54:52Z
dc.date.available2024-06-29T05:54:52Z
dc.date.issued2024en_US
dc.description.abstractHollow Ground: Industry, Extraction, and Ecology in the Floodplains of Early Maryland,” investigates histories of natural resource commodification, environment, and culture in the Patapsco River Valley, or “The Hollow” as it was called by its first European settlers. Beginning in the seventeenth century, English colonists seized the powerful currents of the Patapsco and the forests surrounding it, the ancestral floodplains of Piscataway and Susquehannock peoples, to build large-scale agricultural projects and industrial factories. These operations altered the environment, and as the valley grew into a center of extractive production, its communities experienced more frequent and severe floods which have continued into the present. This dissertation examines these entwined consequences of environmental capitalism and settler colonialism through a site-specific, multi-century lens, studying how humans, plants, and animals within various spaces of production—iron furnaces, wheat fields, grist and cotton mills, schools, prisons, local governments, and family units —experienced industrialization. It traces trace labor ecologies within communities of enslaved, convict, and low-wage workers, and the ways that soil exhaustion, flooding, and other environmental forces both threatened these enclaves and created opportunities for freedom. This work uses a microhistorical methodology to intervene in histories of energy transition, labor, and the Anthropocene. “Hollow Ground” argues that early American industrialism can help us to better understand how local desires for capital growth have accumulated into global processes of toxic emissions, and how the frontline issues faced by post-industrial communities today relate not only to global production but to local histories of extraction and the culture that perpetuates it. These same communities also hold critical histories of commoning, stewardship, labor resistance, and environmentalism that can help create a blueprint for survival in the face of the climate crisis.en_US
dc.identifierhttps://doi.org/10.13016/itnz-ujem
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1903/32915
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.subject.pqcontrolledHistoryen_US
dc.subject.pqcontrolledEnvironmental studiesen_US
dc.subject.pquncontrolledCapitalismen_US
dc.subject.pquncontrolledCultural Historyen_US
dc.subject.pquncontrolledFloodingen_US
dc.subject.pquncontrolledPatapsco Riveren_US
dc.subject.pquncontrolledSettler Colonialismen_US
dc.subject.pquncontrolledState Parksen_US
dc.titleHollow Ground: Industry, Extraction, and Ecology in the Floodplains of Early Marylanden_US
dc.typeDissertationen_US

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