Connect western settlements to eastern markets and reduce travel barriers.
The National Road was authorized in 1806 and built westward from Cumberland, Maryland. It became a major federal internal improvement and a symbol of the American System debate.
Public finance helped connect regions, while also forcing constitutional debates over federal infrastructure.

Watch public finance reduce distance and turn land, roads, canals, and colleges into opportunity.
Public finance supplied the tools: State and local bonds | Tolls | Land sales | Land grants | Tariffs | Public-private charters | Local taxes.

Connect western farms and eastern markets, reduce transportation costs, and grow New York's economy.
New York financed the Erie Canal largely through state bonds backed by tolls. The canal connected the Hudson River to the Great Lakes and changed trade routes.
Public finance turned geography into economic opportunity by making interior trade cheaper and faster.

Promote settlement, raise revenue, reward service, and expand the economy.
Federal land policy used sales, grants, and eventually homestead claims to shape settlement and development. The Homestead Act offered land to settlers who met residency and improvement requirements.
Public land policy converted federal territory into farms, towns, schools, rail corridors, and private wealth.

Expand education in agriculture, engineering, military science, and practical professions.
The Morrill Act granted federal land to states to support colleges focused on agriculture and mechanical arts. States sold land or used proceeds to build educational endowments.
Public finance used land to build human capital and long-term educational institutions.





