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Chapter
Five Systems . . . One Pattern, 1730–1780
DOI link for Five Systems . . . One Pattern, 1730–1780
Five Systems . . . One Pattern, 1730–1780 book
Five Systems . . . One Pattern, 1730–1780
DOI link for Five Systems . . . One Pattern, 1730–1780
Five Systems . . . One Pattern, 1730–1780 book
ABSTRACT
Framing an argument that many other historians would adopt in the twentieth century, Arthur Calhoun—writing in 1917—describes the colonial family of eighteenth-century America in term of social-economic class. This family system, he writes, was “a property institution dominated by middle-class standards and operating as an agency of a social order governed by the interests of a forceful aristocracy,” which in turn twisted everything “to its own profit.” 1