Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review
"A wonderful achievement consisting of a trove of letters from a family living plain lives in central Illinois in the middle of the nineteenth century. Plain lives? Very many deaths from cholera and measles and other means, family strains, feuds, the moral rigor of the Methodist Church, and then the war came. People wear out. There's material here for a dozen novels: 'Mr. Pitner was turned out of the church in March, for selling men and women into perpetual bondage, as the people said. He takes it very hard, he says he has had a great deal of trouble, and we know he has for his sister was burned to death, and his two sons was drowned just at the time they began to be of some service to him but he says that this afaire hurts him worse than all the others, as he knows he is innocent of the charges brought against him. . .'"--Ward Just
"Meticulously edited, the Dumville family letters vividly evoke everyday life for ordinary women in mid-19th century rural America. As the writers describe their hopes, dreams, and fates, this unique archive lets us hear voices that are often silenced, neglected or simply lost."--Robert Dingwall, chair of the American Sociological Association ™s Section on Ethnomethodology and Conversation Analysis
"A very useful discussion of women's place in rural Midwestern communities; the impact of the Civil War on family life; and the texture of life in these small, central Illinois towns. I don't know of any other collection quite like it."--Pamela Riney-Kehrberg, author of Always Plenty to Do: Growing Up on a Farm in the Long Ago
"The editors have a good understanding of everyday life in the rural Midwest in the mid-nineteenth century. The conclusions they draw are based solidly on the evidence provided by the letters and are informed by scholarship in the field."--Marilyn F. Motz, coeditor of Making the American Home: Middle-Class Women and Domestic Material Culture, 1840–1940
"Anne M. Heinz and John P. Heinz show the impact and importance of family letters. . . . This work introduces the reader to the world of everyday people hanging onto their faith to see them through a tough time in American history."--Journal of Illinois History
"A remarkable story of the everyday lives and extraordinary events of mid-nineteenth century America. The editors have made a strong case for the vibrancy and historical significance of women's personal writings. . . . Like intellectual fingerprints on the ledger of history, each letter reveals the distinctiveness of each woman's view of herself and the world around her. Thanks to the solid editorial work by the Heinzs, the voices of commoners, of lower-class people, of women in the American heartland struggling to control their destinies, are now heard and cherished."--Civil War Book Review

Women Work and Worship in Lincolns Country

Product form

£28.80

Includes FREE delivery

RRP £32.00 – you save £3.20 (10%)

Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Wed 21 Jan 2026.

A Hardback by Anne Heinz, John Heinz

1 in stock


    View other formats and editions of Women Work and Worship in Lincolns Country by Anne Heinz

    Publisher: University of Illinois Press
    Publication Date: 09/02/2016
    ISBN13: 9780252039959, 978-0252039959
    ISBN10: 0252039955

    Description

    Book Synopsis


    Trade Review
    "A wonderful achievement consisting of a trove of letters from a family living plain lives in central Illinois in the middle of the nineteenth century. Plain lives? Very many deaths from cholera and measles and other means, family strains, feuds, the moral rigor of the Methodist Church, and then the war came. People wear out. There's material here for a dozen novels: 'Mr. Pitner was turned out of the church in March, for selling men and women into perpetual bondage, as the people said. He takes it very hard, he says he has had a great deal of trouble, and we know he has for his sister was burned to death, and his two sons was drowned just at the time they began to be of some service to him but he says that this afaire hurts him worse than all the others, as he knows he is innocent of the charges brought against him. . .'"--Ward Just
    "Meticulously edited, the Dumville family letters vividly evoke everyday life for ordinary women in mid-19th century rural America. As the writers describe their hopes, dreams, and fates, this unique archive lets us hear voices that are often silenced, neglected or simply lost."--Robert Dingwall, chair of the American Sociological Association ™s Section on Ethnomethodology and Conversation Analysis
    "A very useful discussion of women's place in rural Midwestern communities; the impact of the Civil War on family life; and the texture of life in these small, central Illinois towns. I don't know of any other collection quite like it."--Pamela Riney-Kehrberg, author of Always Plenty to Do: Growing Up on a Farm in the Long Ago
    "The editors have a good understanding of everyday life in the rural Midwest in the mid-nineteenth century. The conclusions they draw are based solidly on the evidence provided by the letters and are informed by scholarship in the field."--Marilyn F. Motz, coeditor of Making the American Home: Middle-Class Women and Domestic Material Culture, 1840–1940
    "Anne M. Heinz and John P. Heinz show the impact and importance of family letters. . . . This work introduces the reader to the world of everyday people hanging onto their faith to see them through a tough time in American history."--Journal of Illinois History
    "A remarkable story of the everyday lives and extraordinary events of mid-nineteenth century America. The editors have made a strong case for the vibrancy and historical significance of women's personal writings. . . . Like intellectual fingerprints on the ledger of history, each letter reveals the distinctiveness of each woman's view of herself and the world around her. Thanks to the solid editorial work by the Heinzs, the voices of commoners, of lower-class people, of women in the American heartland struggling to control their destinies, are now heard and cherished."--Civil War Book Review

    Recently viewed products

    © 2026 Book Curl

      • American Express
      • Apple Pay
      • Diners Club
      • Discover
      • Google Pay
      • Maestro
      • Mastercard
      • PayPal
      • Shop Pay
      • Union Pay
      • Visa

      Login

      Forgot your password?

      Don't have an account yet?
      Create account