'''The Significance of the Frontier in American History''' is a seminal essay by the
American historian Frederick Jackson Turner which advanced the so-called
Frontier Thesis of
American history. It was presented to a special meeting of the
American Historical Association at the
World's Columbian Exposition on
July 12 1893, in
Chicago,
Illinois, and published later that year first in ''Proceedings of the State Historical Society of Wisconsin'', then in the ''Annual Report of the American Historical Association''. It has been subsequently reprinted and
anthologized many times, and was incorporated into Turner's 1921 book, ''The Frontier in American History'', as Chapter I.
The thesis describes his views on how the idea of the
frontier shaped the American being and their characteristics. He talks about how the frontier drove American history and that is why
America is how it is today. Turner reflects on the past to prove his point by noting human fascination with the frontier and how expansion to the American West changed peoples' views on their culture. It is a thesis that has been respected in the historical circle for many years.
Opposition to the Turner Thesis
In
1942, in "The Frontier and American Institutions: A Criticism of the Turner Thesis," Professor
George Wilson Pierson debated the validity of the Turner thesis, stating that many factors influenced American culture besides the looming frontier. Although he respected Turner, Pierson strongly argues his point by looking beyond the frontier and acknowledging other factors in American development.
The Turner Thesis was also refuted in the
1987 release ''The Legacy of Conquest: The Unbroken Past of the American West'' by
Patricia Nelson Limerick. Limerick asserts the notion of a "New Western History" in which the American West is treated as a place and not a process of finite expansion. Unlike Turner, Limerick pushes for a continuation of study within the historical and social atmosphere of the
American West, which she believes did not end in
1890, but rather continues on to this day through a series of interactions by a diverse group of people
External link
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E-book version of ''The Frontier in American History''
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"Western History, New and Not So New" by Walter Nugent