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A Farm Family on Long Island's North Fork

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Life, love, and scandal in a nineteenth-century Long Island farm community.In A Farm Family on Long Island's North Fork, Richard A. Wines traces the history of a vital agricultural community on the...
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  • 01 November 2024
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Life, love, and scandal in a nineteenth-century Long Island farm community.

In A Farm Family on Long Island's North Fork, Richard A. Wines traces the history of a vital agricultural community on the North Fork of Long Island through the story of the last family to live in the old Homestead at the Hallockville Museum Farm. For well over two centuries, community members were almost all descendants of the same group of seventeenth-century Puritan founders. Yet, despite their shared heritage and complex interrelationships, cultural wars raged. Family members and the community divided bitterly on issue after issue, ranging from whether to allow a melodeon into the church to supporting abolitionism. The community weathered many changes-the Civil War, the emergence of new agricultural technologies, the arrival of Eastern European immigrants, even an attempt to build a string of nuclear power plants in the twentieth century. Wines's deep dives into one community's history uncover stories about slavery, racism, and prejudice that many have chosen to forget, as well as stories of compassion or human tragedy we want to remember. A Farm Family on Long Island's North Fork will appeal to those interested in Long Island regional history and the larger history of rural communities throughout New York and the United States.

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Price: £72.50
Pages: 350
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Imprint: SUNY Press
Publication Date: 01 November 2024
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781438499833
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

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"Wines's book contains the trials and tribulations, the successes and failures, the triumphs and tragedies of the many families over 200 years" — Anthony Anadio, State University of New York, Empire State University

"A detailed microcosmic look at changes in a farming community on Long Island, primarily through the experience of several generations of one family and their relatives and neighbors." — Natalie A. Naylor, Hofstra University

List of Illustrations
List of Abbreviations
Acknowledgments

Introduction

1. The Family Attic

2. The Young Halsey Hallock

3. Love, War, and Death: Daniel, Halsey, and the Civil War

4. Last Family in the Homestead: 1866–1885

5. Scandals in the Church

6. Life in the Homestead: 1885–1920

7. The Hallock Farm

8. Sound Avenue Prosperity

9. Love, Courtship, and Marriage on Sound Avenue

10. Holidays and Entertainment

11. What Did the Hallocks Eat?

12. Retirement and Old Age

13. Last Decades in the Homestead: 1939–1979

14. Epilogue: Hallockville Museum Farm, Keyspan Project, Hallock State Park

Appendix: Guide to the Hallocks

Notes
Bibliography
Index