American History

A FEDERAL TAKE ON TRADE

GIBBONS V. OGDEN 22 U.S. 1 (1824) INTERSTATE COMMERCE CLAUSE

At 1 p.m. on August 17, 1807, a 150-foot vessel’s crew cast off from a dock near Greenwich Village on Manhattan Island, changing the course of American history. Two 15-foot steam-driven side wheels powered the ship to and from Albany on the Hudson River. The steamship’s introduction made feasible rapid, reliable transport of raw materials and finished goods, ushering in the industrial revolution.

States saw in the and its maiden voyage a path to prosperity if they could offer steamship routes on waters within their borders. Some states were encouraging private road building by granting exclusive franchises empowering holders to charge regulated tolls. Doing

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from American History

American History1 min read
‘Trail of Tears’
historynet.com/cherokee-slave-revolt What happened today, yesterday—or any day you care to search. Test your historical acumen—every day! The gadgetry of war—new and old—effective, and not-so effective. Listen to daily selections from our archive of
American History2 min read
Beer City’s Blue Ribbon Mansion
FREDERICK PABST was captain of a Great Lakes steamer when Maria Best came aboard his ship and caught his attention. He started courting her, the daughter of the owner of Milwaukee’s Phillip Best Beer Company, and they married in 1862. It didn’t take
American History2 min read
Revolutionary War Traveling Exhibit to Cross the Nation
IN DECEMBER, the American Battlefield Trust and the Daughters of the American Revolution unveiled the new exhibition American Revolution Experience at the DAR Museum in Washington, D.C. This longterm mounting of the exhibit will remain at DAR’s natio

Related Books & Audiobooks