Discover a pioneering look at a rural town and its hidden lineage
A historical study from 1912, The Hill Folk reports on how heredity and environment shape a community through two family lines. It blends field notes, charts, and sociological analysis to examine crime, poverty, and the costs of care in a small Massachusetts town.
Written as a careful, evidence‑based inquiry, the book follows real families and how traits cluster across generations. It shows both the limits of environment and the persistent pull of inherited factors, while raising questions about social policy and care for those labeled feebleminded or defective.
- Wheels and charts that map family lines across generations
- Observations on how environment interacts with heredity
- Real‑world reflections on poverty, welfare, and state care
- Discussion of reforms and humane approaches to difficult traits
Ideal for readers of social history and early 20th‑century studies of heredity and public policy.