by April Kutger

When she finds an escaped slave in the woods near an old fishing cabin, Angelise Lindstrom converts the cabin to a stop on the Underground Railroad and joins with him to work as "irregulars" in the Union army. Joining them are an octoroon actress who passes for white and a free black man. This novel has action, intrigue, danger, and romance. Something for everyone!

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Wednesday, December 8, 2010

19th Century Farming in Pennsylvania from "The Silence of Sorrowful Hours"


The region where the Hoffmann farm stood was full of streams and ponds, protruding boulders, and rolling hills. Old Indian trails laced the valley. Many had been abandoned for decades and were overgrown and forgotten, but others had been widened into roads as settlers moved west. Not far away, there were iron ore, copper, and coal mines whose workers came from Ireland, Wales and England as well as Central and Eastern Europe and who brought Catholicism to the mostly Quaker and Lutheran communities.
Uncle Jonathan raised soybeans, hay, wheat, rye, and oats; he had pear, apple, and peach orchards. An ox, two Belgian draft horses, four quarter horses, and a mule did the work and got them where they needed to go. Three dairy cows, a dozen chickens, geese, ducks and pigs provided milk, cheese, eggs, and meat. Seasonal laborers were hired in the spring and fall and day workers when they were needed.
The farm’s stone and wood house was a hundred years old. The original part of the house was three stories; a summer kitchen and pantry had been added on some fifty years later. The big room at the rear of the house had a long wooden table that could seat ten people and was used for all their meals. The back porch was a recent addition; a part of it was partitioned off for the bath and laundry rooms. There was a well in the yard and an underground space by the barn where they stored ice.

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