Originally published in: Clara von Gerstner, Beschreibung einer Reise durch die Vereinigten Staaten von Nordamerica in den Jahren 1838 bis 1840 (Leipzig: Verlag der J. C. Hinrichs’fchen Buchhandlung, 1842), 377-385. Translated by Professor Chris Burwick, Hamilton College
This pamphlet played an important role in the expansion of Shakerism into the western states of Ohio...
Shakertown at Pleasant Hill, Kentucky was the third largest of nineteen Shaker communities which exi...
An article published in the Mt. Sterling Advocate on August 8, 1922 describing the visit of the Stat...
The 33rd annual Shaker Seminar took participants to the museums at South Union and Pleasant Hill, Ke...
On 30 March 1848, a Pleasant Hill Shaker family journal reported, “Two strangers professing to be mi...
Visiting the Shakers, 1778-1849: Watervliet, Hancock, Tyringham, New Lebanon is a compilation of nin...
The Richard W. Couper Press is pleased to announce that Visiting the Shakers, 1849-1899: Watervliet,...
Transcript of an article published employing shorthand in The Phonolographic Magazine (1855): 85-95 ...
Publication announcement and order form for Visiting the Shakers, 1778-1849, edited by Glendyne Werg...
In the early nineteenth century, a young man belonging to the prominent Byrd family of Virginia, the...
Visiting the Shakers, 1850-1899 : Watervliet, Hancock, Tyringham, New Lebanon is a compilation of ei...
In frontier Indiana, beginning in the 1820s, several settlements of free African Americans grew and ...
What may be the most interesting and detailed outsider’s account of the White Water community also h...
Photocopy of a manuscript journal in the collection of the Monroe County Public Library, Key West, F...
This thesis will study several aspects of Frankenmuth. Among those aspects will be a comparison of F...
This pamphlet played an important role in the expansion of Shakerism into the western states of Ohio...
Shakertown at Pleasant Hill, Kentucky was the third largest of nineteen Shaker communities which exi...
An article published in the Mt. Sterling Advocate on August 8, 1922 describing the visit of the Stat...
The 33rd annual Shaker Seminar took participants to the museums at South Union and Pleasant Hill, Ke...
On 30 March 1848, a Pleasant Hill Shaker family journal reported, “Two strangers professing to be mi...
Visiting the Shakers, 1778-1849: Watervliet, Hancock, Tyringham, New Lebanon is a compilation of nin...
The Richard W. Couper Press is pleased to announce that Visiting the Shakers, 1849-1899: Watervliet,...
Transcript of an article published employing shorthand in The Phonolographic Magazine (1855): 85-95 ...
Publication announcement and order form for Visiting the Shakers, 1778-1849, edited by Glendyne Werg...
In the early nineteenth century, a young man belonging to the prominent Byrd family of Virginia, the...
Visiting the Shakers, 1850-1899 : Watervliet, Hancock, Tyringham, New Lebanon is a compilation of ei...
In frontier Indiana, beginning in the 1820s, several settlements of free African Americans grew and ...
What may be the most interesting and detailed outsider’s account of the White Water community also h...
Photocopy of a manuscript journal in the collection of the Monroe County Public Library, Key West, F...
This thesis will study several aspects of Frankenmuth. Among those aspects will be a comparison of F...
This pamphlet played an important role in the expansion of Shakerism into the western states of Ohio...
Shakertown at Pleasant Hill, Kentucky was the third largest of nineteen Shaker communities which exi...
An article published in the Mt. Sterling Advocate on August 8, 1922 describing the visit of the Stat...