The Connecticut Academy
of Arts and Sciences
VOICES OF THE NEW REPUBLIC
Connecticut Towns 1800-1832
Volume I: What They Said
Volume II: What We Think
| CHRISTOPHER P. BICKFORD and HOWARD R. LAMAR,
Editors |
| CAROLYN C. COOPER and SANDRA L. RUX,
Associate Editors |
WINNER OF THREE
AWARDS
- Homer D. Babbage, Jr. Award for Connecticut
History from the Association for the Study of Connecticut History
- Bookbinders' Guild of
New York 2004 Design Award for Scholarly/Reference Book Series
- 2004 Connecticut Book Award from the Connecticut
Center for the Book, an affiliate of the Center for the Book
in the Library of Congress
This is a two-volume source book for Connecticut history
in the early years of the new republic, a period relatively neglected
by historians. These volumes contain fresh and vivid material,
and brings Connecticut's past alive.
Volume I: What They Said presents a set of original
reports about Connecticut towns written between 1800 and 1832
in answer to survey questions that the Connecticut Academy of
Arts and Sciences, newly chartered in 1799, sent out to the 107
towns in 1800. They asked about each town's history since its
founding, its plants, animals and fishes, geology, rivers, weather,
farming methods and farm products, industries, diseases, churches,
schools, libraries, taverns and breweries, ships, roads, bridges,
Indians, free blacks, poor relief, emigration, crimes, amusements
and vices--and curiously enough, "the time when pleasure
carriages were first used."
The voices that replied vary in tone: exuberant, boastful, matter-of-fact,
dismissive, mournful, nostalgic, fearful, meticulous, humorous,
complaining, thoughtful, censorious, pious, didactic, eager,
self-confident, reverential. The stories they tell reveal the
conditions in which these newly self-governing citizens lived,
and the methods they used for improvement of conditions. For
the first time, all their "statistical accounts" are
gathered together and published here, so we can read What
They Said in a single volume.
Volume II: What We Think contains essays by
modern historians and scientists interpreting what those documents
say about particular characteristics of the towns in that period
of economic, political, religious, and social transition.
The essays offer commentary and assessment of the town reports
on various topics the Connecticut Academy queried in 1800. The
essayists write from the vantage point of knowing not only what
has happened in the meantime, but also what other writers since
then have said about those subjects, those times, and those places.
They don't consider that What We Think is the final word
on What They Said, but consider it an invitation to you,
the reader, to think about these questions, too.
Volume
I Table of Contents
Volume
II Table of Contents
Editors'
Biographies
Essayists'
Biographies
Volume I: What They
Said ISBN 1-878508-24-5
493 pp., cloth, 8.5 x 11, illus., $31.95
Volume II: What We Think ISBN 1-878508-25-3
338 pp., cloth, 8.5 x 11, illus., $31.95
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