Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 144
Trim: 7¼ x 10
978-0-945612-70-4 • Paperback • December 1999 • $49.00 • (£38.00)
Warren R. Hoftra is professor of history at Shenandoah University in Winchester, Virginia. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Virginia.
Chapter 1 Foreword, by Charles L. Burwell
Chapter 2 Introduction to Second Printing
Chapter 3 Preface
Chapter 4 Chronology
Chapter 5 Taking Up the Land
Chapter 6 The Plantation and the Farm
Chapter 7 Two Worlds
Chapter 8 An Era of Sectionalism
Chapter 9 A Political Split
Chapter 10 The Entering Wedge
Chapter 11 Division
Chapter 12 Epilogue
Chapter 13 Appendix: Legislative Petitions for the Formation of Clarke County
Chapter 14 Notes
Chapter 15 Index
In this precise and perceptive portrait of Clarke County, Hofstra shows how this part of Virginia that lay suspended between Pennsylvania and Tidewater Virginia was in reality a world of its own. Above all, Hofstra's ability to locate this 'separate place' within the larger Atlantic world makes this book a classic work of regional history.
— Gregory H. Nobles, Georgia Institute of Technology
I am so pleased to learn that this little gem of a book will be made available to a wider audience. Just as we have learned that all twentieth-century suburbs are not alike, so we can appreciate that all eighteenth-century frontiers were not alike either. Hofstra's study of the most Anglicized region on the Shenandoah Valley frontier is an example of community history at its best.
— Robert D. Mitchell, University of Maryland at College Park