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  • Shaker Studies, no. 5. 188 pages, illustrations, 2013.
    ISBN: 978-1-937370-07-7 ($20)

    Shaker leaders built big dairy barns, sent articles and barn diagrams to the specialized agricultural press, and hosted editors and writers on barn tours. This richly illustrated book explores the unexpected relationship between nineteenth century Shaker religious leaders and scientific agricultural journalists.

  • Shaker Studies, no. 7. 45 pages, illustrations, 2013.
    ISBN:  978-1-937370-09-1 ($30)

    Reproduces four sixteen-page manuscript books by Eleanor Potter which record her spirit messages for the leaders of the Shaker Ministry. These manuscripts include spirit drawings as well as text. Crosthwaite provides an introductory essay setting the context for the messages and an analysis of them.

    • From the Editor
    • The Miller Collection Comes to Hamilton College Library by M. Stephen Miller
    • An Interview with Steve Miller conducted by Christian Goodwillie
    • Selections from the Miller Collection by M. Stephen Miller

    Front cover illustration: A. J. White label die proofs. From the M. Stephen and Miriam R. Miller Collection. Steve Miller writes:
    In 1993, a dealer in postage stamps from California sent me fifty-nine items “out of the blue” with a cover letter that opened: “Enclosed is the collection of Mother Seigel’s [Syrup] die proofs as found in the Waterlow archive. Possibly this is every known example.” This product, also known in this country as “The Shaker Extract of Roots,” was a joint venture of the Shakers at Mount Lebanon, N.Y., with a physician/entrepreneur named Andrew Judson White. With a bit of searching on my own, I learned that Waterlow & Sons was an extremely fine engraving and printing firm in London, responsible not only for exquisite labels but also for most of the stamps used in the British Empire. When they went out of business in the 1990s, this man purchased their complete archives. This group of labels, dating from 1872 to 1943, is unique. A die proof is a first-proof pressing and is always archived before a production run.

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    • From the Editor
    • The Richmond Family and the Shakers by Stephen J. Paterwic
    • Communal Vegetarianism: The Sacred Diet of Mary’s City of David by Julieanna Frost
    • Johann Christoph Müller: Harmonist Pioneer, Composer, and Apostate by Emily Lapisardi
    • Hamilton College Library “Home Notes”
    • Communal Societies Collection: New Acquisitions

    Front cover illustration: Purnell, Mary. The Comforter: The Mother’s Book. 1st ed. Benton Harbor, Mich.: Israelite House of David, [1908]-1912. 2 v. (iv, 208 pp.; iii, 144 pp.). ill. (some col.). 17-22 cm. Detail from front cover.

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    • From the Editor
    • Daniel Pierce Thompson and “The Shaker Lovers”: Portraying the Shakers in Fiction and on the Stage By Brian L. Bixby and Jill Mudgett
    • “The mighty hand of overruling providence”: The Shaker Claim to America By Jane F. Crosthwaite
    • A Treasury of Shaker Ephemera Rediscovered at the Western Reserve Historical Society By Christian Goodwillie

    Front cover illustration: Two copies of a handbill announcing the new postal address for Mount Lebanon. To avoid confusion with the town of New Lebanon, the Shaker community was assigned its own post office with a distinct name. These handbills were found at the Western Reserve Historical Society, Shaker Collection. For more information see the article beginning on page 112.

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    • From the Editor
    • Brother Ricardo Belden Revisited by Magda Gabor-Hotchkiss
    • The Amana Church Society: Community, Continuity and Change by Peter Hoehnle
    • The Shakers in Eighteenth-Century Newspapers, Part Three: “Calvin” versus “A Lover of Truth,” Abusing Caleb Rathbun, the Death of Joseph Meacham and the Tale of His Sister by Christian Goodwillie
    • Hamilton College Library “Home Notes”
    • Conservation of the Earliest Known Shaker Architectural Image: The Ambrotype of the South Family, Harvard, Massachusetts

    Front cover illustration: Photograph (ambrotype). Harvard, Massachusetts, Shaker village, ca. 1860. See page 64 for the history of this image and an account of its preservation.

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  • American Communal Societies Series, no. 7. 239 pages with 214 b/w illustrations, 2012.
    ISBN: 978-1-937370-03-9 ($30)

    In 1936 the Index of American Design commissioned photographer Noel Vincentini to photograph the Shaker villages of Mount Lebanon, Hancock, and Watervliet. This book presents the 206 pictures taken by Vincentini. The identifications Vincentini provided were often erroneous. Edward and Faith Andrews, who were employed by the Index to work with Vincentini, corrected many of the identifications, but even those were incomplete. This book presents the complete set of photographs for the first time and with corrected identifications. An introduction by Lesley Herzberg, curator of collections at Hancock Shaker Village, describes the tumultuous series of events that surrounded the production of these images. The book is a companion to an exhibit at Hancock Shaker Village.

    About the author:
    Lesley Herzberg is curator of collections at Hancock Shaker Village in Pittsfield, Massachusetts.

  • American Communal Societies Series, no. 8. 165 pages,  illustrations, 2012.
    ISBN: 978-1-937370-04-6 ($20)

    At the height of the prudish Victorian age, the utopian Oneida Community (1848-1880) openly practiced group marriage which, it was said, freed women from unwanted pregnancy, marital bondage, and household drudgery. This radically successful social experiment was based on the teachings of the commune's leader, John Humphrey Noyes, whose key writings on gender relations are assembled here for the first time.

    About the author:
    Anthony Wonderley is curator of collections and interpretation at the Oneida Community Mansion House, the museum of the famous nineteenth-century utopia in upstate New York.

  • Shaker Studies, no. 4. 259 pages, illustrations, 2012.
    ISBN: 978-1-937370-02-2 ($25)

    Henry Cumings was ten years old when he and his family joined the Enfield, New Hampshire, Shakers in 1845. Capable and intelligent, he was entrusted with increasing leadership responsibilities as he came of age. For twenty years he served as one of the Society’s most eloquent spokespersons for a Shaker way of life. In 1881, at the age of forty-five, Cuming reappraised his commitment to Shakerism and left the community. He did not, however, repudiate his Shaker heritage. Between 1904 and 1913 he wrote a series of historical essays for the local newspaper, the Enfield Advocate, in which he shared his personal reflections on Shakerism. Collected here for the first time, this volume of Henry Cumings’ writings offers the reader a lively and detailed account of the Shaker community he knew so well, and its influence on the town of Enfield, New Hampshire.

    • From the Editor
    • The Harvard Shaker Cemetery by Roben Campbell
    • The Tribulations of the White Water Shakers: The Child Molestation Trial of 1840 by Thomas Sakmyster
    • Hamilton College Library “Home Notes”
    • Communal Societies Collection: New Acquisitions

    Front cover illustration: [Postcard]. Shaker Burying Ground, Harvard, Mass. [detail]. The picture shows the Harvard Shaker cemetery with both stone and metal markers.

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