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Susan E. Gray - The Yankee West: Community Life on the Michigan Frontier

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Susan Gray explores community formation among New England migrants to the Upper Midwest in the generation before the Civil War. Focusing on Kalamazoo County in southwestern Michigan, she examines how Yankees moving west reconstructed familiar communal institutions on the frontier while confronting forces of profound socioeconomic change, particularly the rise of the market economy and the commercialization of agriculture. Gray argues that Yankee culture was a type of ethnic identity that was transplanted to the Midwest and reshaped there into a new regional identity. In chapters on settlement patterns, economic exchange, the family, religion, and politics, Gray traces the culture that the migrants established through their institutions as a defense against the uncertainty of the frontier. She demonstrates that although settlers sought rapid economic development, they remained wary of the threat that the resulting spirit of competition posed to their communal ideals. As isolated settlements developed into flourishing communities linked to eastern markets, however, Yankee culture was transformed. What was once a communal culture became a class culture, appropriated by a newly formed rural bourgeoisie to explain their success as the triumphant emergence of the Midwest and to identify their region as true America.

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The Yankee West
COMMUNITY LIFE ON THE MICHIGAN FRONTIER
Susan E. Gray
The University of North Carolina Press
Chapel Hill and London

title:The Yankee West : Community Life On the Michigan Frontier
author:Gray, Susan E.
publisher:University of North Carolina Press
isbn10 | asin:0807823015
print isbn13:9780807823019
ebook isbn13:9780807861745
language:English
subjectNew Englanders--Michigan--History--19th century, Community life--Michigan--History--19th century, Frontier and pioneer life--Michigan, Michigan--History, Local.
publication date:1996
lcc:F566.G788 1996eb
ddc:977.4/04
subject:New Englanders--Michigan--History--19th century, Community life--Michigan--History--19th century, Frontier and pioneer life--Michigan, Michigan--History, Local.
1996 The University of North Carolina Press
All rights reserved
Manufactured in the United States of America
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Gray, Susan E., 1952The Yankee West: community life on the Michigan frontier / by Susan E. Gray. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0-8078-2301-5 (cloth: alk. paper). ISBN 0-8078-4610-4 (pbk.: alk. paper)
1. New EnglandersMichiganHistory19th
century. 2. Community lifeMichiganHistory
19th century. 3. Frontier and pioneer lifeMichigan.
4. MichiganHistory, Local. I. Title.
F566.G788
1996
96-7269
977.4'04dc20
CIP

The paper in this book meets the guidelines for permanence and durability of the Committee on Production Guidelines for Book Longevity of the Council on Library Resources.
00 99 98 97 96Picture 2Picture 35 4 3 2 1
To my parents,
Jack and Caroline Gray
Contents
Preface
ix
Introduction. The Yankee West and the "Universal Yankee Nation"
1
1
Those Desirous of Removing to the Kalamazoo: The Designs of Settlement
17
2
This Walking before Creeping Will Never Answer: The Necessary Market
43
3
The Unhallowed Dicker Traffic: The Necessary Neighbors
67
4
Spoiling the Whole: Families and Farming
91
5
A Pretty Joining of God and Mammon: Religion and Community
119
6
All of the Whiggs and Some of the Democrats: Politics and Community
139
Conclusion. The Foundations of an Empire
169
Appendix
179
Notes
193
Index
221

Page ix
Preface
This book began more years ago than I care to remember as a paper for a University of Chicago graduate seminar on the social history of the nineteenth-century Midwest, directed by Kathleen Conzen. The year before, I had watched in envy and dismay as fellow students in a seminar on colonial American history dug up fascinating records from their various hometowns on the east coast with an eye to contributing to the colonial community studies then in vogue. They spoke of local historical societies and gravestone rubbings with an easy intimacy that I, confined by family and finances to the Midwest, could not hope to emulate. "Very well," I thought, "I'll find my own community in the Midwest." The pioneering aspect of this decision was particularly appealing: unlike the East, and especially New England, the Midwest was hardly overrun by ambitious graduate students. And as a suitable place to study, where better to look than in my own backyard?
This spurt of filiopietism was aided and abetted by my parents, Jack and Caroline Gray, who pointed me toward the Regional Historical Archives of the state of Michigan at Western Michigan University in Kalamazoo. They also remembered Roy Nichols. He was probably in his late eighties at the time, as was his wife, Joyce, but my memory of him is fixed in my childhood: pats on the head and nickels occasionally pressed into my hand after Sunday
Page X
morning services at the Richland Presbyterian Church. Once the local banker, he was known to be extremely tight with larger sums. Roy Nichols's nickels, however, were not what gave my parents pause. They remembered that while serving as supervisor of Richland in the 1950s he had saved the earliest township records from destruction when the board burned its nineteenth-century proceedings in the interests of tidying up. The historical vision illuminated by his rescue was probably genealogical. Roy Nichols was proud of his family's role in the settlement of Richland; the first township record book contains his ballpoint pen annotations, including an asterisk after the name William J. Humphrey and the notation at the bottom of the page, "Roy Nichols's grandfather."
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