Examines 150 years of the social life and customs of a small New England town through letters and other documents belonging to the family that built and lived in the authors' house in Hampton, Connecticut
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Historian James Oliver Robertson ( American Myth, American Reality ) and novelist Janet C. Robertson ( Journal Home ), a married couple, bought a sprawling old house in the northeastern Connecticut town of Hampton in the mid-1960s; several years later they began to learn its history when a former owner gave them a cache, spanning 150 years, of letters and other papers concerning the house's former inhabitants. That "treasure trove" inspired this narrative, a spirited reconstruction of work, diet, courtship and town life in the 19th century. Revealing citations from documents like the ribald letters of a young man ca. 1820 and an 1860s Yale student's meticulous account of school expenses, including cocaine, afford lively and surprising perspectives. The Robertsons sometimes step back for a larger picture: they suggest the vigor of the mid-19th-century town as the churches became separate from political life and cosmopolitanism filtered in through letters from travelers in Europe. They also reflect on their own deepening involvement with Hampton and conclude happily that they could acquire "roots in a past that did not seem to belong to us." Illustrations not seen by PW. $25,000 ad/promo; BOMC alternate; author tour.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.
A remarkable, often poignant--but never sentimental--chronicle from a historian (University of Connecticut; America's Business, 1984, etc.) and his wife of life as it once was in their small Connecticut hometown of Hammond. The text is marred only by some clumsy writing and information overload. Presented with an amazingly comprehensive collection of letters and other memorabilia belonging to the Taintor family, from whose descendants the Robertsons bought their home in 1967, the couple used this treasure trove as a basis to write the history not only of their home but also of a particular place and time. The house--built circa 1796 by the first Taintors to settle in Hammond- -is in itself a record of changing fashions, increased fortunes, and evolving technology. By 1820, the Taintors' more elevated status led to an extensive remodeling and modernizing: The old stone chimney was replaced by six brick ones, and an elegant front staircase was built. The Robertsons record not only these architectural changes but also the familiar cycles of birth and death, wealth and poverty. They also note cultural changes-- pointing out, for example, that not until the late 19th century were Christmas and weddings celebrated with all the trappings that we think of as timeless. The authors describe how Hammond, once a busy regional center--the town reached its maximum population of 1,379 in 1800--became a typical small New England town as the declining fertility of the land and the lack of economic opportunity led to an exodus during the early 19th century--an exodus that the Taintors joined as first one or two family members, then entire generations, moved to the big cities or out West. Meanwhile, Hammond's old family homes became summer places where widely scattered families gathered and briefly re-created the ancestral notions of home and hearth. History from laundry lists to family letters, but no less riveting than that of more sublime pedigree. Despite its flaws: a landmark portrait of small-town America. -- Copyright ©1993, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
After buying an old house in Connecticut, the Robertsons--James, an academic, and Janet, an author--discovered that their home had been owned by only one family since it was built in the 1790s. Through papers, love letters, books, visiting cards, and travel records they have been able to reconstruct the history of America through the lives of the previous owners. A captivating narrative portrays this microcosm of life; we are able to share in the shaping of American history as we know it today. The unique aspect of this book is that history is told through the lives of the people who lived through it. We share the everyday lives of everyday people as they define and shape what is to become an integral part of our national past. Recommended for all libraries.
- Barbara Zaborowski, Cambria Cty. Lib., Johnstown, Pa.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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