Gentlemen on the Prairie : Victorians in Pioneer Iowa. için kapak resmi
Gentlemen on the Prairie : Victorians in Pioneer Iowa.
Başlık:
Gentlemen on the Prairie : Victorians in Pioneer Iowa.
Yazar:
Harnack, Curtis.
ISBN:
9781587299681
Yazar Ek Girişi:
Fiziksel Tanımlama:
1 online resource (263 pages)
Seri:
Bur Oak Book
İçerik:
Contents -- Preface -- Introduction -- 1. Athlete into Immigrant -- 2. The Prairie Lords -- 3. The Prospect before Them -- 4. Going Out to Iowa -- 5. Landed Gentry in the Making -- 6. Some Difficulties Surmounted -- 7. Gentlemanly Activities -- 8. The Faces of Success -- 9. The Colony Portrayed -- 10. How the Game Was Played -- 11. Colony Concepts, Personal Destinies -- 12. Two Colonials -- 13. Getting On with It -- 14. The State of the Colony -- 15. A Bit of a Struggle -- 16. Dramatic Endings -- 17. In the Fullness of Time -- 18. The Vanished Colony -- Notes -- Index -- About the Author.
Özet:
In the 1880s, the well-connected young Englishman William B. Close and his three brothers, having bought thousands of acres of northwest Iowa prairie, conceived the idea of enticing sons of Britain's upper classes to pursue the life of the landed gentry on these fertile acres. "Yesterday a wilderness, today an empire": their bizarre experiment, which created a colony for people "of the better class" who were not in line to inherit land but whose fathers would set them up in farming, flourished in Le Mars, Iowa (and later in Pipestone, Minnesota), with over five hundred youths having a go at farming. In Gentlemen on the Prairie, Curtis Harnack tells the remarkable story of this quite unusual chapter in the settling of the Midwest.       Many of these immigrants had no interest in American citizenship but enjoyed or endured the challenging adventure of remaining part of the empire while stranded on the plains. They didn't mix socially with other Le Mars area residents but enjoyed such sports as horse racing, fox hunts, polo, and an annual derby followed by a glittering grand ball. Their pubs were named the House of Lords, the House of Commons, and Windsor Castle; the Prairie Club was a replica of a London gentlemen's club, an opera house attracted traveling shows, and their principal hotel was Albion House. In St. George's Episcopal Church, prayers were offered for the well-being of Queen Victoria. Problems soon surfaced, however, even for these well-heeled aristocrats. The chief problem was farm labor; there was no native population to exploit, and immigrant workers soon bought their own land. Although sisters might visit the colonists and sometimes marry one of them, appropriate female companionship was scarce. The climate was brutal in its extremes, and many colonists soon sold their acres at a profit and moved to countries affiliated with

Britain. When the financial depression in the early 1890s lowered land values and made agriculture less profitable, the colony collapsed. Harnack skillfully draws upon the founder's "Prairie Journal," company ledgers, and other records to create an engaging, engrossing story of this quixotic pioneering experiment. f.
Notlar:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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