DLPS Faculty Publications
Abstract
Spain acquired Louisiana from France in 1763 but was initially unsuccessful in integrating the distant colony into the Spanish commercial system. Encouraged by the colony’s chief financial officer, Intendant Martín Navarro, the Spanish Crown introduced legislation on January 22, 1782 to promote commerce. Free trade was to be permitted for ten years with designated ports in France. The liberal character of the code fostered the growth of numerous merchant companies in New Orleans who found markets for all of Louisiana’s exports in France, England and the French West Indies. Unfortunately, Spain continued to absorb all of the administrative costs for a colony whose trade was almost exclusively with foreign countries.
Disciplines
Economic History | International and Area Studies | United States History
Recommended Repository Citation
Coutts, Brian E., "El Intendente, Los Comerciantes y el "Comercio Libre" en Luisiana 1778-1788" (1988). DLPS Faculty Publications. Paper 71.
https://digitalcommons.wku.edu/dlps_fac_pub/71
Included in
Economic History Commons, International and Area Studies Commons, United States History Commons
Comments
Presented at the International Congress on Charles III and the South of the United States, La Rabida, Spain, November 11, 1988, by Dr. Brian E. Coutts, Head of the Department of Library Public Services, WKU.
In English.