The Maine Shaker community at Sabbathday Lake in New Gloucester dates to 1783, when there were 24 Shaker communities in America. Today Sabbathday Lake is one of the two that remain. It retains traditional elements of the religion and culture, but now relies on tours, merchandising, and donations as well as the traditional Shaker industries to survive. Details
In 1805, at the height of the period of early religious excitement in Kentucky, three members of the...
Visiting the Shakers, 1850-1899 : Watervliet, Hancock, Tyringham, New Lebanon is a compilation of ei...
Illustration titled "Shakers at Meeting The Final Procession." The Shakers were a religious group th...
North by East piece on the Sabbathday Lake Shaker Village in New Gloucester, where property taxes, ...
Books & the Arts piece on a Shaker Thanksgiving Day at the Sabbathday Lake Community in New Glouces...
Lengthy description of the Sabbathday Lake Shaker community. Six of the village\u27s eighteen struc...
Program for a Shaker concert given at E. Meyers Hall in Fairfield County, Ohio, on October 20, 1848....
This article traces the construction, use, and ultimate fates, of the first generation of Shaker mee...
Catalogue [published] on the occasion of an exhibition [at Bowdoin] of Shaker art, furniture, and ob...
Today’s museums tend to preserve what was known as the Church, or Centre, Family of the Shaker villa...
One of the three major tenets of Shakerism is community. While Shakers did have intense loyalty to t...
Community self-sufficiency was an ideal that both defined and informed the Shaker experience in Amer...
Through their expansion west into the American frontier, the religious group known as the Shakers ex...
In the late eighteenth century a small Shaker community travelled to America under the leadership of...
Illustration of Shakers dancing in Warren County, Ohio, from "Historical Collections of Ohio" by Hen...
In 1805, at the height of the period of early religious excitement in Kentucky, three members of the...
Visiting the Shakers, 1850-1899 : Watervliet, Hancock, Tyringham, New Lebanon is a compilation of ei...
Illustration titled "Shakers at Meeting The Final Procession." The Shakers were a religious group th...
North by East piece on the Sabbathday Lake Shaker Village in New Gloucester, where property taxes, ...
Books & the Arts piece on a Shaker Thanksgiving Day at the Sabbathday Lake Community in New Glouces...
Lengthy description of the Sabbathday Lake Shaker community. Six of the village\u27s eighteen struc...
Program for a Shaker concert given at E. Meyers Hall in Fairfield County, Ohio, on October 20, 1848....
This article traces the construction, use, and ultimate fates, of the first generation of Shaker mee...
Catalogue [published] on the occasion of an exhibition [at Bowdoin] of Shaker art, furniture, and ob...
Today’s museums tend to preserve what was known as the Church, or Centre, Family of the Shaker villa...
One of the three major tenets of Shakerism is community. While Shakers did have intense loyalty to t...
Community self-sufficiency was an ideal that both defined and informed the Shaker experience in Amer...
Through their expansion west into the American frontier, the religious group known as the Shakers ex...
In the late eighteenth century a small Shaker community travelled to America under the leadership of...
Illustration of Shakers dancing in Warren County, Ohio, from "Historical Collections of Ohio" by Hen...
In 1805, at the height of the period of early religious excitement in Kentucky, three members of the...
Visiting the Shakers, 1850-1899 : Watervliet, Hancock, Tyringham, New Lebanon is a compilation of ei...
Illustration titled "Shakers at Meeting The Final Procession." The Shakers were a religious group th...