Harmony's utopian town offered a practical, self-sufficient life that shaped a nation.
This book traces the rise of the Harmony Society, founded by George Rapp, and how a group of immigrants built a bustling, orderly community in early America. It shows how their work—from farms to mills to silk production—sustained the town and influenced the broader region, even as internal debates and external pressures tested their ideals.
- Learn how a large group translated necessity into a common fund and shared duties.
- See how leadership shifted from Rapp to trusted lieutenants, and how outside ideas tested the community.
- Discover the rise and fall of ventures like silk manufacturing and how the society engaged with politics, trade, and education.
- Understand the balance between communal living and personal liberty, and the legacy they left behind.
Ideal for readers of American history, religious-societal experiments, and tales of pioneer communities that blended work, faith, and daily life.