Le cabotage à l’ère de la vapeur : le commerce et la vie communautaire le long de la côte du Golfe du Mexique

Auteurs-es

  • Kevin Grubbs

DOI :

https://doi.org/10.25071/2561-5467.1410

Mots-clés :

sailing ships, coasting trade, labour, industrialization, Gulf Coast of the United States

Résumé

Cet article traite de la persistance du cabotage sur la côte du golfe du Mexique à la fin du XIXe siècle, qui révèle la coexistence de la voile et de la vapeur au sein d’un même univers maritime. Les goélettes de cabotage reliaient les petits ports, les îles et les marchés intérieurs, perpétuant ainsi les traditions ancestrales de travail et de vie communautaire, alors que l’industrialisation reconfigurait le commerce mondial. En retraçant ces réseaux locaux de travail et d’échange, l’article fait valoir que la modernité maritime le long du Golfe du Mexique était inégale et construite plutôt qu’uniforme. Le Golfe apparaît ainsi comme un espace liminal où mer et rivage, voile et vapeur, tradition et modernité se croisaient constamment.

Biographie de l'auteur-e

Kevin Grubbs

Kevin Grubbs is an assistant professor of history at McLennan Community College. He earned his PhD from the University of Southern Mississippi in 2023. His work examines the interplay between brown and blue water work in the postbellum South. Previous publications include “Pathways of Escape: The Interstate Slave Trade and Runaway Slaves in Mississippi.” This article won the Clark G. Reynolds Student Paper Award in 2022.

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Publié-e

2026-07-08

Comment citer

Grubbs, K. (2026). Le cabotage à l’ère de la vapeur : le commerce et la vie communautaire le long de la côte du Golfe du Mexique. The Northern Mariner Le Marin Du Nord, 35(3-4), 361–376. https://doi.org/10.25071/2561-5467.1410