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book: A Tale of New England: The Diaries of Hiram Harwood, Vermont Farmer, 1810-1837 | Robert E. Shalhope
 
 


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 A Tale of New Engl...  

A Tale of New England: The Diaries of Hiram Harwood, Vermont Farmer, 1810-1837
Robert E. Shalhope

The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2003 - 336 pages

average customer review:based on 1 review
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The extraordinary diary of Vermont farmer Hiram Harwood -- a fourteen-volume record of personal, family, and community events from 1808 to 1837 -- provides Robert E. Shalhope with the material for this rich microhistory. Harwood's struggle to reach full manhood and assume his position as head of the family, his misgivings about challenging -- much less displacing -- his father, the changes American life brought to this traditional rite of passage, Hiram's relationships with wife and children, seasonal events, and all the day-to-day experiences of this finally tragic figure make for a fascinating story and provide a highly unusual window into antebellum American life.

Although he focuses mainly on the story of a single farmer, Shalhope also incorporates other stories from this wide-ranging chronicle. Readers glimpse the social, political, economic, and religious life of the entire New England region. Most of all, though, the story of Hiram Harwood reveals the personal price exacted of him by one family's unyielding belief in patriarchy.




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Not as accurate as it should be

I bought this book due to the fact I am a direct descendant of the family that is the topic of this book. I have also read much of the Harwood Diaries themselves and was curious to see the author's interpretations. There are many parts of this book which are just verbatim quotations strung together from the Harwood Diaries. In other parts of the book the author seems determined to prove his theory of hatred and jealousy amongst the Harwoods. this is not the true story by any means. The true story is told in the Harwood Diaries themselves. As with any family there were squabbles but they did not dominate the relationships between the Harwoods as the author suggests. The author fails to get the name of the first Harwood in the United States correct as well which surprised me, given the considerable writings on this subject available in the Southern Vermont area. While I agree that the book is entertaining in its own right, from a factual standpoint it leaves a lot to be desired.


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