In 1813, Joseph Dyer, his wife Mary, and their five children joined the Shaker community in Enfield, New Hampshire. Joseph quickly adapted to the Shaker way of life, but Mary chafed under its strictures and eventually left the community two years later. When the local elders and her husband refused to release the couple\u27s children to Mary, she embarked on what would become a fifty-year campaign against the Shakers, beginning with the publication in 1818 of A Brief Statement of the Sufferings of Mary Dyer. The following year the Shakers countered by publishing Joseph\u27s A Compendious Narrative, a scathing attack on what the title page called the character, disposition and conduct of Mary Dyer. The Dyers\u27 dueling accounts of the bre...
In the late eighteenth century a small Shaker community travelled to America under the leadership of...
Joanne Begiato draws upon a wealth of accounts of marital experiences in eighteenth-century and earl...
Reprinted from Farmer’s Monthly Visitor 11, no. 4 (April 30, 1849): 55-58. In this unsigned article ...
"Poetry": p. 87-88."A remonstrance against the testimony and application of Mary Dyer, requesting Le...
For five days in May 1818, a mob set fear into the hearts of the Enfield, New Hampshire, Shakers. Th...
Accounts of the Shakers in eighteenth-century American newspapers help to shed light on the murky ea...
Since 1824, fiction writers have attempted to treat the celibate communalist life of the American Sh...
The Shaker Seminar for 2010 convened at Hancock Shaker Village in commemoration of the fiftieth anni...
In public papers before 1785, a kind word about the Shakers is rarely to be found. As the Shakers mo...
At its heart, this is a case fraught with pain and loss that is not unique to this particular period...
The enthusiasm of Edward Cummings for a Shaker life was a passing thing, but his decision to bring h...
An overview of the earliest newspaper accounts of the Shakers, paying particular attention to how th...
In what follows it is my intention to identify briefly the religious claims of the Shakers, formally...
In 2012, a set of forty-eight journals which followed the life of Wendell Elkins until his death, we...
The latter years of the Enfield, Connecticut, Shaker Society have correctly been associated with the...
In the late eighteenth century a small Shaker community travelled to America under the leadership of...
Joanne Begiato draws upon a wealth of accounts of marital experiences in eighteenth-century and earl...
Reprinted from Farmer’s Monthly Visitor 11, no. 4 (April 30, 1849): 55-58. In this unsigned article ...
"Poetry": p. 87-88."A remonstrance against the testimony and application of Mary Dyer, requesting Le...
For five days in May 1818, a mob set fear into the hearts of the Enfield, New Hampshire, Shakers. Th...
Accounts of the Shakers in eighteenth-century American newspapers help to shed light on the murky ea...
Since 1824, fiction writers have attempted to treat the celibate communalist life of the American Sh...
The Shaker Seminar for 2010 convened at Hancock Shaker Village in commemoration of the fiftieth anni...
In public papers before 1785, a kind word about the Shakers is rarely to be found. As the Shakers mo...
At its heart, this is a case fraught with pain and loss that is not unique to this particular period...
The enthusiasm of Edward Cummings for a Shaker life was a passing thing, but his decision to bring h...
An overview of the earliest newspaper accounts of the Shakers, paying particular attention to how th...
In what follows it is my intention to identify briefly the religious claims of the Shakers, formally...
In 2012, a set of forty-eight journals which followed the life of Wendell Elkins until his death, we...
The latter years of the Enfield, Connecticut, Shaker Society have correctly been associated with the...
In the late eighteenth century a small Shaker community travelled to America under the leadership of...
Joanne Begiato draws upon a wealth of accounts of marital experiences in eighteenth-century and earl...
Reprinted from Farmer’s Monthly Visitor 11, no. 4 (April 30, 1849): 55-58. In this unsigned article ...