William Scales is an elusive and intriguing figure in the history of early Shakerism. Scales was not a typical Shaker convert - he was a graduate of Harvard University, had been an itinerant Congregational minister, and had published two works prior to his conversion to Shakerism in 1782 or 1783. It is known that he wrote about Shakerism, both when he lived with Mother Ann Lee and the elders with her as well as afterwards, but until recently, it was presumed that none of his works about the Shakers had been published or survived in manuscript form. Scales\u27 The Mystery of the People Called Shakers Laid Open has recently come to light. It was published in the June 15, 1789 issue of the Boston Gazette and Country Journal and prominently...
Though Shakers lived at Tyringham from 1780 until 1875, the most well-known event of its history is ...
The Shaker Seminar for 2010 convened at Hancock Shaker Village in commemoration of the fiftieth anni...
Those writing about the Shakers during the last forty years, with one exception, seem content to giv...
A reprint of an article appearing in the Boston Gazette, and the Country Journal. June 15, 1789. Iss...
The collection, annotation, and editorial writing associated with the set of apostate and anti-Shake...
Accounts of the Shakers in eighteenth-century American newspapers help to shed light on the murky ea...
In public papers before 1785, a kind word about the Shakers is rarely to be found. As the Shakers mo...
An overview of the earliest newspaper accounts of the Shakers, paying particular attention to how th...
The Shakers were ever changing their policies and daily practices. To imagine that the Shakers never...
The era of the founding in America, roughly from the beginning of the Revolutionary War in 1775 thro...
In the early nineteenth century, a young man belonging to the prominent Byrd family of Virginia, the...
Proctor Sampson (ca.1773-1855) was instrumental in gathering the community at Sodus Bay, New York. H...
"William Van Norden, print."--Verso of title page (p. [2]).Attributed to Barnabas Bates. Cf. Richmon...
Visiting the Shakers, 1778-1849: Watervliet, Hancock, Tyringham, New Lebanon is a compilation of nin...
In 2012, a set of forty-eight journals which followed the life of Wendell Elkins until his death, we...
Though Shakers lived at Tyringham from 1780 until 1875, the most well-known event of its history is ...
The Shaker Seminar for 2010 convened at Hancock Shaker Village in commemoration of the fiftieth anni...
Those writing about the Shakers during the last forty years, with one exception, seem content to giv...
A reprint of an article appearing in the Boston Gazette, and the Country Journal. June 15, 1789. Iss...
The collection, annotation, and editorial writing associated with the set of apostate and anti-Shake...
Accounts of the Shakers in eighteenth-century American newspapers help to shed light on the murky ea...
In public papers before 1785, a kind word about the Shakers is rarely to be found. As the Shakers mo...
An overview of the earliest newspaper accounts of the Shakers, paying particular attention to how th...
The Shakers were ever changing their policies and daily practices. To imagine that the Shakers never...
The era of the founding in America, roughly from the beginning of the Revolutionary War in 1775 thro...
In the early nineteenth century, a young man belonging to the prominent Byrd family of Virginia, the...
Proctor Sampson (ca.1773-1855) was instrumental in gathering the community at Sodus Bay, New York. H...
"William Van Norden, print."--Verso of title page (p. [2]).Attributed to Barnabas Bates. Cf. Richmon...
Visiting the Shakers, 1778-1849: Watervliet, Hancock, Tyringham, New Lebanon is a compilation of nin...
In 2012, a set of forty-eight journals which followed the life of Wendell Elkins until his death, we...
Though Shakers lived at Tyringham from 1780 until 1875, the most well-known event of its history is ...
The Shaker Seminar for 2010 convened at Hancock Shaker Village in commemoration of the fiftieth anni...
Those writing about the Shakers during the last forty years, with one exception, seem content to giv...