Abstract This article invites readers to examine water as an active force in U.S. history rather than a backdrop to national development. Complementing traditional historiographies and drawing on blue humanities, we reframe national narratives by linking the country’s oceanic reach to domestic hydrology and imperial expansion, positioning the United States as a key driver and emblematic case of the “blue acceleration.” A water-centered lens reveals how water availability and management extended state power, created sacrifice zones, fostered uneven development, and continue to test American democracy. The essay offers a conceptual map for reimagining the U.S. past and human–water relations in a warming world.
Tommaso et al. (Sun,) studied this question.