Each year from 1790 to the end of the Civil War the town’s people of Otisfield wrestled with the dilemma of town relief. Examining this issue from two perspectives - the town taxpayers and the town poor - Jean Hankins sheds light on the politics, the finances, the hardships, the family life, and the burdens of responsibility in Maine\u27s nineteenth-century small towns
Stone walls running incongruously through deep woods; fields and pastures becoming overgrown with br...
Veazie, the smallest town in Penobscot County (consisting of four square miles or 2,560 acres), is a...
In this article author Nancy Hatch presents a geographical and historical account of the town of Buc...
New England\u27s settlement laws dictated which town or county was responsible for supporting indivi...
Although slaves and poor, free menial laborers were by no means a majority of the population in late...
Community Action Programs and Poor People of Maine : A History.State of Maine. Division of Economic ...
It is a common assumption that many New England frontier towns were founded by veterans of the Revol...
The article discusses the impact of the Great Depression on the rural communities of Maine. It also...
A hand-bound copy of an article on John Alfred Poor published in New-England Historical and Genealog...
The arrival of the automobile challenged Maine to rethink a road system that dated back to colonial ...
This article discusses the impact of the Stamp Act riots on the small town of Scarborough and it\u27...
In keeping with all the colonies of British North America in the eighteenth century, New Jersey resi...
Community self-sufficiency was an ideal that both defined and informed the Shaker experience in Amer...
As the Maine back country was settled in the late eighteenth century, evangelical congregations were...
This thesis explores the poor relief system in Somerset County, Maryland, between 1666 and 1742. By ...
Stone walls running incongruously through deep woods; fields and pastures becoming overgrown with br...
Veazie, the smallest town in Penobscot County (consisting of four square miles or 2,560 acres), is a...
In this article author Nancy Hatch presents a geographical and historical account of the town of Buc...
New England\u27s settlement laws dictated which town or county was responsible for supporting indivi...
Although slaves and poor, free menial laborers were by no means a majority of the population in late...
Community Action Programs and Poor People of Maine : A History.State of Maine. Division of Economic ...
It is a common assumption that many New England frontier towns were founded by veterans of the Revol...
The article discusses the impact of the Great Depression on the rural communities of Maine. It also...
A hand-bound copy of an article on John Alfred Poor published in New-England Historical and Genealog...
The arrival of the automobile challenged Maine to rethink a road system that dated back to colonial ...
This article discusses the impact of the Stamp Act riots on the small town of Scarborough and it\u27...
In keeping with all the colonies of British North America in the eighteenth century, New Jersey resi...
Community self-sufficiency was an ideal that both defined and informed the Shaker experience in Amer...
As the Maine back country was settled in the late eighteenth century, evangelical congregations were...
This thesis explores the poor relief system in Somerset County, Maryland, between 1666 and 1742. By ...
Stone walls running incongruously through deep woods; fields and pastures becoming overgrown with br...
Veazie, the smallest town in Penobscot County (consisting of four square miles or 2,560 acres), is a...
In this article author Nancy Hatch presents a geographical and historical account of the town of Buc...