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Book Reviews for Era 4: Economic Transitions 1840-1890 Thomas Bassett, The Growing Edge: Vermont Villages, 1840-1880 Walt Garner, Kate McMullan, Roberta Saldana: This book was a delightful read. In addition to providing a good overview of Vermont village life in the years preceding and following the Civil War, it also provides a good entry point to the mystical and mysterious something, often unnamed, that makes Vermont special and the Vermont experience, even in the late twentieth century, unique. It is impossible to list what one ‘learns’ from a book such as this. There is a wealth of interesting detail about nineteenth-century life. At the same time the author presents a world view and an understanding of the importance of rural life that is paramount to understanding Vermont. The overall readability of this book makes it an excellent classroom resource. I would highly recommend it for every school’s Vermont collection. It is clear and well-written. It is a good source for much factual information on life in Vermont in the nineteenth century. It has wonderful tables and maps which one could draw from for overheads and/or handouts. The tone, vocabulary, and sentence structure of this book make it very accessible to students who read at fifth grade level or better. Middle school students could use it effectively to research topics in Vermont history."
Lyn A. Bonfield and Mary C. Morrison, Roxana’s Children: The Biography of a Nineteenth Century Vermont Family Walt Garner, Kate McMullen, Roberta Saldana: Chapters could be assigned to compare and contrast sibling’s lives, resources, obstacles they met, etc. Subjects’ migrations could be the basis for maps, studies of individual settlements, etc. Students could do essays on which of the lifestyles they find the most appealing and why. They could practice diary keeping--if a chapter was written about them, what would it contain?"
Howard Coffin, Full Duty: Vermonters in the Civil War Walt Garner and Roberta Saldana: The reviewers recommend that this volume with its extensive bibliography, period photos, and detailed directions to Civil War sites and monuments including many in Vermont, be included as a valuable addition to Historical Society's Teacher's Library and any study of Vermont in the Civil War. 1) What does the book tell about the era/topic it covers? It follows Vermonters from enlistment through battle and into the grave; shows Vermonters as dependable, brave, and willing to sacrifice: models for other battalions and brigades; sees the struggle through the letters and diaries of the men in the front lines, under fire, fearing death, pinning their names on their uniforms on the eve of particularly fearsome fights, but willing to go on; through the lives of the wives, siblings and parents at home raising money, making blankets and socks and shirts, receiving broken, maimed loved ones home, or picking up coffins in buckboard at the depot, trudging up steep Vermont hills to obscure burial grounds in now-abandoned fields behind the cellar holes where the soldier once lived; adds muscle, bone, and organ-- often torn, shattered, eviscerated--to the cerebral strategies of generals and commanders ties the lives of mid-nineteenth-century Vermonters to the places where they lived and died with haunting tours of the spots they bled. 2) What important points about Vermont history did you learn? The story of William Scott, the "Sleeping Sentinel," was new and enchanting to me. The letters and diaries that bear witness to Vermonters' attitudes toward slavery are revealing, especially Wilbur Fisk's writings on pp. 177-178. The career of Stephen Thomas, who lived near Randolph, was interesting to me, and made me want to visit his grave. As I read this book, I kept having the urge to visit the places to which Coffin serves as guide, to make some kind of mystical contact with the people who lived in these terrible and valiant times. Plus:
My 14 and 16 year old girls not only read it with relish but were so enthralled they went on to read a half dozen or so books from the bibliography. 3) Does it include primary sources? Yes, in the form of letters and diaries, often quoted at great length; yes, also, in Coffin's first-hand visits to the sites of battles and graves, describing in poignant terms what exists in those places today. Footnotes , bibliography, and period photos also included. 4) How might it be used to teach Vermont history? Many of the illustrations and written passages can be copied for overheads or bulletin boards; regiments' movements could be made into maps; passages about the commercial benefits of war, together with the increased labor pressures on farmers, and the wanderlust of returning soldiers, could be combined Basset's and Barron's books to examine the changing social landscape in the mid-nineteenth century; sites mentioned could be visited, as many are in the state of Vermont, for example: the places where troops were mustered into service in Rutland, St. Johnsbury, Burlington, and Brattleboro; sites of former army hospitals (Brattleboro, Montpelier, and Burlington); the buildings, roads, and parks where the St. Albans Raid took place; Haldene, Robert Lincoln's home outside Manchester; with Civil War monuments in almost every village and Civil War gravestones in almost every cemetery; to name a few. This book could be a springboard for learning more about the Civil War in its totality. It would be extremely helpful in biographical research. The descriptions are so clear that students could attempt battle maps and compare them with those available elsewhere. As each chapter is almost an individual entity not dependent upon the rest of the book it lends itself to topical studies. Research the underground railroad in VT. Have students take sides and debate the causes and reasons for fighting from the Vermont perspective. Investigate prison life. The use of Morgans in the Civil War. How the war affected home life in Vermont. Research medical treatments, facilities, and disease during the war. The effects of freed slaves on Vermonters.
Thomas Dublin, Farm to Factory: Women’s Letters, 1800-1860
Walt Garner, Kate McMullan, Roberta Saldana: Farm to Factory focuses on the first wage labor available to nineteenth century middle class farm girls, and how the availability of such work changed their lives. Thus, this book makes real the changes - work moved from home to factory, machines took over previously handcrafted work, hours became regulated - brought to ordinary lives by the Industrial Revolution. An additional importance of Farm to Factory is the fact that it describes the lives of ordinary people to whom students can easily relate. It is often very hard for students to make the leap to the historical consciousness of the period they are studying; to look at historical events not from the vantage point of their own lives and experience, but rather as experienced by those who lived them. This book helps with that task in that the voices of these female letter writers speak clearly, the context of the events described becomes alive and accessible to the reader. How these women felt about their first paid labor experience, and how they felt about other aspects of their lives: independence, family responsibilities, community and cultural dictates is well communicated. This book is an excellent entry point to the study of the Industrial Age as it applies to women's lives. It is social history at its best. Farm to Factory could be used in a primary classroom: here, Delia Page's handwritten letter to her younger sister displayed using an overhead projector and read aloud, would make the point that history involved real people - similar to us - at an earlier time. Upper elementary and middle level students researching Vermont history topics could easily work with a selection of letters or excerpts from letters. High school students assigned this book would find it an excellent social history text. Finally, the introduction could be very useful to teachers preparing a unit on the nineteenth century, and/or on the Industrial Revolution in Vermont. Thus, the reviewers recommend Farm to Factory highly both as background reading and as a classroom resource."
G. Clifton Wisler, Mr. Lincoln’s Drummer Sue Wolff: Appealing is the fact that the book is based on fact and could be a good starting point to analyze the war, its purpose and its cost in human lives. This book could lead into or follow discussions of age, heroism, causes and consequences of war, and ways of life at the time. Writing activities could include using fact as a basis for writing a fictional piece." |