" In 1805, at the height of the period of early religious
excitement in Kentucky, three members of the Shaker community in
New Lebanon, New York, came to the Commonwealth of Kentucky to
recruit converts. Soon there were little communities of Believers
at Pleasant Hill in Mercer County and at South Union in Logan
County. These settlements survived into the twentieth century as
centers of worship and communal life; the buildings the Shakers
erected here and many of their tools and artifacts remain to
delight the eye today. But it is the life of the Shakers as well as
the monuments they left that Julia Neal explores. Using the
detailed journals and other records kept at both communities, she
recounts the early struggles against poverty and persecution, the
high hopes of the 1850s when the Shaker idea of communal life
seemed to have borne fruit at last, and the hardship and violence
of Civil War and Reconstruction days, from which the Kentucky
Shakers were never to recover. This absorbing account of the
Shakers at Pleasant Hill and South Union is, like so much else
associated with the Shakers, simple, functional, and beautiful.
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