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Salt Pork and Poor Bread and Whiskey - The Adirondack Diaries of John Brown Francis (Paperback, Annotated edition)
Loot Price: R374
Discovery Miles 3 740
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Salt Pork and Poor Bread and Whiskey - The Adirondack Diaries of John Brown Francis (Paperback, Annotated edition)
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Loot Price R374
Discovery Miles 3 740
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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This is an account of the visits of John Brown Francis (later a
five-term governor of Rhode Island) to the vast Adirondack
wilderness known as "John Brown's tract" after the diarist's
grandfather, one of the founders of the Brown dynasty in
Providence. The elder man had had a grand vision of developing the
timber and mineral resources of the tract (210,000 acres, or over
320 square miles), but had been repeatedly thwarted by climatic and
environmental obstacles. Even though his personal efforts died with
him in 1803, his heirs attempted for decades afterwards to carry
out his vision. Descriptions of floods, summer frosts and other
difficulties in the diaries demonstrate that even after the removal
of the British and Indian threats following the War of 1812, most
efforts to transform the Adirondack forests to agricultural and
commercial pursuits (such as the iron manufacturing described in
the diaries) were doomed to failure. John Brown Francis was in his
twenties when he wrote these accounts in 1816, 1817 and 1818. "
F]rom tavern keepers and toll collectors to farmers' daughters and
land barons, little of the human condition escapes the eye of the
youthful annalist. While most of our insights into the population
of the early American frontier stem from the observations of
foreign travelers like DeTocqueville, Mrs. Trollope and Dickens
and, 40 years earlier, the numerous Hessian diarists], here, for
historians of the early republic, is a whole fresh catalogue by an
American reporter." The editor of this work, Henry A. L. Brown, is
the grandson of John Brown Francis' adopted granddaughter. This
transcription is thoroughly annotated and well illustrated, and
includes a genealogy of John Brown Francis and a foreword by Albert
Klyberg, director of the Rhode Island Historical Society. The
bibliography lists about seventy-five sources and the every-name
plus subject index includes about 350 entries.
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