New York to Boston; Travels in the 1840’s
Edited by Robert P. Hagelstein
ISBN 0-913057-44-4
Paperback, 164 Pages, $14.95
First hand accounts of history are windows into the past. Imagine what it must have been like to live and travel in the northeastern corridor of the United States during the nation’s formative years in the 1840’s. Here are selections from two works written only four years apart during that decade, Dickens’ American Notes (1842) and D. Appleton & Co.’s The American Guide Book (1846).
The juxtaposition of the Guide’s observations to those of Dickens is a case of the whole being greater than the sum of its parts. The self-professed objective of the Guide’s editors: “comprehensiveness with brevity being essential qualities for a work of this kind, all extraneous matter has been omitted, and it is hoped the work will be found to consist of all that is likely to be useful or interesting to travelers.” Dickens is one of those travelers, but his coverage of the same areas is more idiosyncratic, and frequently observed with a comic eye unique to Dickens.
What emerges between the two is a fascinating portrait of a nation, which although still in its infancy, is recognized as being destined for greatness. According to the Guide, “If they continue united [the States] they will then become the greatest nation in the world; and the most powerful of the states of Europe would rank as secondary to them.” Of the American character Dickens says “they are, by nature, frank, brave, cordial, hospitable, and affectionate. Cultivation and refinement seem but to enhance their warmth of heart and ardent enthusiasm; and it is the possession of these latter qualities in a most remarkable degree, which renders an educated American one of the most endearing and most generous of friends.”
The book begins with Dickens’ hilarious depiction (but terrifying as well) of his journey to the United States on The President, an American steam vessel, including going aground in the Halifax harbor. We then travel with him and with our guide from Appleton throughout the New York City vicinity, Connecticut, and Massachusetts, by carriage, steamboat, ferry, and railroad. We are first-hand witnesses to the people, transportation systems and the everyday life of America in the 1840’s.
Together these selections put the reader into the presence of a fascinating past and make of the journey a virtual entry into the gritty, exciting days of 19th-century traveling.
About the Editor:
Robert Hagelstein enjoyed a 35-year publishing career in New York and Connecticut. During those years, he published more than 10,000 new titles in the humanities and social sciences, but first hand accounts, local histories, and guidebooks became special areas of interest. Among the many large-scale projects of this genre he collaborated on was micropublishing the complete, original 19th century Baedeker’s Handbook for Travelers and republishing the slave narratives as recorded by the Work Projects Administration.
Published by:
Confrontation Press, Department of English, C.W. Post Campus of Long Island University, Brookville, N.Y. 11548-1300 (516) 299-272
Click Here for Table of Contents
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