Visiting the Shakers, 1850-1899 : Watervliet, Hancock, Tyringham, New Lebanon is a compilation of eighty-five accounts written by visitors to four Shaker villages. The book is a companion volume to Glendyne R. Wergland\u27s earlier work published by the Couper Press in 2007, which covered 1788-1849. Together, these two volumes will have enduring value for historians of the Shakers and American culture in general. 456 pages with 45 black and white illustrationshttps://digitalcommons.hamilton.edu/books/1038/thumbnail.jp
For thirty-one years, Elder Rufus Bishop was at the top of the Shaker hierarchy. From 1821 until his...
Henry Cumings was ten years old when he and his family joined the Enfield, New Hampshire, Shakers in...
Those writing about the Shakers during the last forty years, with one exception, seem content to giv...
Visiting the Shakers, 1778-1849: Watervliet, Hancock, Tyringham, New Lebanon is a compilation of nin...
Publication announcement and order form for Visiting the Shakers, 1778-1849, edited by Glendyne Werg...
In the late eighteenth century a small Shaker community travelled to America under the leadership of...
During the nineteenth century, the Shakers conducted America\u27s first successful experiment in uto...
Communal Societies Collection: New Acquisitions Extract from an Unpublished Manuscript on Shaker H...
In the half century between 1830 and 1880 the American public encountered the first visual represent...
This work is a comprehensive examination of the history and life of White Water Village by leading e...
The dissertation analyzes the history of tourism at Shaker communities from their foundation to the ...
The following is the first installment of a reprint of a fourteen-part article first published in Bi...
This article traces the construction, use, and ultimate fates, of the first generation of Shaker mee...
In 1936 the Index of American Design commissioned photographer Noel Vincentini to photograph the Sha...
"William Van Norden, print."--Verso of title page (p. [2]).Attributed to Barnabas Bates. Cf. Richmon...
For thirty-one years, Elder Rufus Bishop was at the top of the Shaker hierarchy. From 1821 until his...
Henry Cumings was ten years old when he and his family joined the Enfield, New Hampshire, Shakers in...
Those writing about the Shakers during the last forty years, with one exception, seem content to giv...
Visiting the Shakers, 1778-1849: Watervliet, Hancock, Tyringham, New Lebanon is a compilation of nin...
Publication announcement and order form for Visiting the Shakers, 1778-1849, edited by Glendyne Werg...
In the late eighteenth century a small Shaker community travelled to America under the leadership of...
During the nineteenth century, the Shakers conducted America\u27s first successful experiment in uto...
Communal Societies Collection: New Acquisitions Extract from an Unpublished Manuscript on Shaker H...
In the half century between 1830 and 1880 the American public encountered the first visual represent...
This work is a comprehensive examination of the history and life of White Water Village by leading e...
The dissertation analyzes the history of tourism at Shaker communities from their foundation to the ...
The following is the first installment of a reprint of a fourteen-part article first published in Bi...
This article traces the construction, use, and ultimate fates, of the first generation of Shaker mee...
In 1936 the Index of American Design commissioned photographer Noel Vincentini to photograph the Sha...
"William Van Norden, print."--Verso of title page (p. [2]).Attributed to Barnabas Bates. Cf. Richmon...
For thirty-one years, Elder Rufus Bishop was at the top of the Shaker hierarchy. From 1821 until his...
Henry Cumings was ten years old when he and his family joined the Enfield, New Hampshire, Shakers in...
Those writing about the Shakers during the last forty years, with one exception, seem content to giv...