Starting a Business in 1776 vs Today: What Colonial Entrepreneurs Can Still Teach Modern Business Owners
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In this episode, we explore what it was really like starting a business in 1776 during the founding of America and compare it to entrepreneurship in today’s modern economy. Long before LLCs, business loans, online banking, and digital marketing, colonial entrepreneurs built businesses through apprenticeships, personal reputation, merchant credit, manufacturing, and sheer resilience during one of the most uncertain periods in American history.
We examine how printers, blacksmiths, merchants, tavern owners, manufacturers, and entrepreneurs such as Benjamin Franklin, Robert Morris, John Hancock, and James Hunter helped shape the early American economy during the American Revolution. From colonial weapons factories and iron works to tavern networking, transportation challenges, financing systems, and apprenticeship training, this episode reveals how entrepreneurship functioned during the Revolutionary era.
We also compare 1776 entrepreneurship to today’s startup culture, discussing taxes, regulation, communication speed, women in business, colonial manufacturing, business networking, wealth creation, and the enduring entrepreneurial spirit that still drives innovation more than 250 years later.
This exploration of colonial entrepreneurship is a featured part of RetireCoast’s 250th Anniversary series, which commemorates the upcoming 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence.
Each article in this collection is specifically created to expose aspects of life in 1776 that are not generally known in traditional histories. For instance, the series dives into the often-overlooked realities of everyday citizens, highlighting the vital economic roles of women who managed taverns, print shops, and family businesses, as well as the hardships faced by camp followers, ordinary laborers, and prisoners on British prison ships.
Furthermore, several articles in the series draw direct comparisons between the colonial era and the modern world. The series deeply contrasts what it was actually like starting and financing a business in 1776 with modern entrepreneurship, comparing a time of handwritten ledgers, informal partnerships, and zero liability protection to today's landscape of LLCs, global digital marketing, and complex regulations. It also features other direct "then and now" analyses, such as an exploration of how the prices and purchasing power of everyday goods have evolved over the last two-and-a-half centuries. https://retirecoast.com/starting-a-business-in-1776/ [https://retirecoast.com/starting-a-business-in-1776/]
Explore more historical articles, calculators, and business resources at RetireCoast.com [https://retirecoast.com] and our America’s 250th Anniversary Hub.
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