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A fragile legacy of well-being : three families and the trajectory of America, 1750-2019 / David E. Stuart
Historical Society of Pennsylvania - Closed Stacks HN60 .S78 2019
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- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Stuart, David E.
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Well-being--Social conditions.
- Well-being.
- Dinsmore family.
- Vandegrift family.
- Hart family.
- Physical Description:
- xxi, 402 pages : genealogical tables, illustrations, maps ; 23 cm
- Place of Publication:
- Santa Fe : Cultural Impacts Publishing, 2019.
- Summary:
- "The half-century preceding the Declaration of Independence was remarkable--an eruption of widely owned productive farms, ample high-quality food, growing demand for skilled labor, rising wages, and a scattered population all combined to create a notably higher level of well-being than could be found in populations born and raised in Europe and the British Isles. When the Declaration was signed, American-born children were the tallest, the healthiest, the longest-lived, and the least likely to suffer infant death in the Anglo-European world. This reality created a powerful expectation, and it gave rise to a physiological, economic, and cultural dynamic that merged with the very definition of "American." Over the next half-century, high rates of natural population increase, new waves of immigration, declining real wages, lagging food production, and higher disease rates essentially erased America's well-being advantage by 1855 to 1860. Doubts, regionalism, bitter politics, and the Civil War all coincided with the steep decline in public well-being--but that dynamic had become part of "us." It lives on, undulating, to this day. The Fragile Legacy of Well-Being documents this progression through the lived experience of three historical families--the Ulster-Scot Dunsmores/Densmores, the Amsterdam Dutch Vandergrifts, and the English Harts. Through careful research, detailed analysis, and vivid storytelling, each of these families comes alive for the reader to present the variety of lived experience in the early-American landscape. Stuart narrates the rise and fall of prosperity and well-being in America in a study that carries haunting undertones for our own present." -- Back Cover
- Contents:
- Part 1: Old Robert's America
- The American Advantage
- On Braddock's Road, 1800
- Family Origins and the Hunger for Self-Sufficiency
- Transportation, Infrastructure, and Frontier Efficiencies
- Regional Culture, History, and Changes
- 1812 and 1812: War and Its Consequences
- Family Networks, Work, and Population Growth
- The Twilight of Self-Sufficiency
- Part 2: At the Forks of the Ohio: Vandergrift, Hart and Densmore
- Vandergrift, Hart, and Densmore
- Angst, Iron, and the Drumbeats of War
- The 1860s
- Whose War Was It?
- Cousins in the Nation's Industrial Full's-Eye
- Iron, Industrial Efficiencies, and Consequences
- Postwar Culture: Class, Labels, and Consequences, 1861-1879
- Continuing Unrest: the 1870s
- Pittsburgh's Symphony of Iron: The Densmores
- The 1890s: Both the Gay and the Dour
- Part 3: The 1900s
- Middle-Class Dreams
- Paths to Well-Being
- The Great Emptiness
- How Many Americas?.
- Notes:
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- ISBN:
- 9781082183287
- 1082183288
- OCLC:
- 1415845932
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