A nation's dream. A catastrophic gamble. A failure that reshaped history.
At the close of the seventeenth century, Scotland stood at a crossroads. Economically constrained, politically sidelined, and shut out of the expanding riches of global trade, the nation pinned its hopes on a single audacious vision: the creation of a Scottish trading colony on the Isthmus of Panama. Known as the Darien Scheme, it promised wealth, independence, and a place among the great commercial powers of Europe. Instead, it ended in ruin.
The Rise and Ruin of the Darien Scheme tells the full story of this extraordinary venture ? from its intoxicating beginnings to its devastating collapse. Drawing on contemporary accounts, parliamentary debates, and the lived experiences of those who sailed across the Atlantic, Laura West traces how ambition, miscalculation, geography, disease, and international hostility combined to doom the project. More than 2,000 Scots risked everything on the promise of Darien; many would never return.
This is not simply a tale of colonial failure, but a study of national aspiration and the perilous edge between vision and hubris. The book explores how the Darien disaster drained Scotland's wealth, shattered public confidence, and helped pave the way for the Union of 1707 ? permanently altering the nation's future.
Measured, humane, and unsparing, The Rise and Ruin of the Darien Scheme is a compelling work of narrative history that reveals how one small strip of land became the fulcrum on which a country's fate turned.