Across Buxton and Williams College, a vivid boyhood memoir unfolds with warm, clear recollections of daily life, work, and community.
This firsthand reminiscence traces a early 19th-century childhood in a bustling New England town. It blends family life, farm labor, simple entertainments, and the rhythms of a world without factories or modern conveniences. The narrator recalls growing up among neighbors, a lively mix of stores, schools, and homes, and the way a young mind absorbed stories, lessons, and the social fabric of his day. The book moves from the family hearth to the old houses, the town’s streets, and the surrounding countryside, weaving in portraits of local figures, schools, and the long arc of a college town’s evolution.
- Personal memories of daily chores, farming, and self-help traditions.
- Vivid scenes of old houses, shops, and the town’s evolving streets.
- Accounts of school life, teachers, and student culture at Williams College.
- Characters and anecdotes that illuminate late 1800s community life.
Ideal for readers who enjoy warm, grounded memoirs, local history, and portraits of American life in a changing era.