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In The Shade of the Maples: A Settler's Story of Early Life in Western Maine

In The Shade of the Maples: A Settler's Story of Early Life in Western Maine

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Current price: $11.22
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In The Shade of the Maples: A Settler's Story of Early Life in Western Maine

By None

In The Shade of the Maples: A Settler's Story of Early Life in Western Maine

Current price: $11.22
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Size: Kobo eBook

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In the Shade of the Maples is a work of narrative local history that traces the life of a western Maine farm through the experiences of one family across more than a century. Centered on Daniel Gray, an early settler, the book follows the establishment, endurance, and eventual decline of a subsistence farm shaped by labor, faith, kinship, and the limits of a changing rural economy. Drawing on primary sources—including deeds, census records, church documents, cemetery inscriptions, and local memory—Barry Kallander reconstructs the everyday realities of nineteenth-century life: clearing land, sustaining households, weathering illness and loss, and remaining rooted to place. As the Gray family's story unfolds, it reflects broader regional transitions, from frontier settlement to market integration and from working farmland to abandoned fields reclaimed by forest. At the heart of the narrative is a small family burial ground, shaded by maples, where generations were laid to rest and where memory endures long after ownership of the land passed from family hands. Blending careful research with a measured, reflective voice, In the Shade of the Maples offers both a detailed case study of rural New England life and a meditation on land, legacy, and belonging.
In the Shade of the Maples is a work of narrative local history that traces the life of a western Maine farm through the experiences of one family across more than a century. Centered on Daniel Gray, an early settler, the book follows the establishment, endurance, and eventual decline of a subsistence farm shaped by labor, faith, kinship, and the limits of a changing rural economy. Drawing on primary sources—including deeds, census records, church documents, cemetery inscriptions, and local memory—Barry Kallander reconstructs the everyday realities of nineteenth-century life: clearing land, sustaining households, weathering illness and loss, and remaining rooted to place. As the Gray family's story unfolds, it reflects broader regional transitions, from frontier settlement to market integration and from working farmland to abandoned fields reclaimed by forest. At the heart of the narrative is a small family burial ground, shaded by maples, where generations were laid to rest and where memory endures long after ownership of the land passed from family hands. Blending careful research with a measured, reflective voice, In the Shade of the Maples offers both a detailed case study of rural New England life and a meditation on land, legacy, and belonging.

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