

An edition of Three frontiers (1994)
family, land, and society in the American West, 1850-1900
By Dean L. May
Publish Date
1994
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Language
eng
Pages
321
Description:
"This book is a study of the values and aspirations of the earliest agrarian settlers in the Far West and how they changed in the frontier setting. It compares rural people who settled in the Willamette Valley in the 1840s, the Utah Valley in the 1850s, and the Boise Valley in the 1860s."--BOOK JACKET. "The author explores the reasons for Americans' move away from a culture centering on family and kin and from attitudes that valued and protected the land, not for its commercial worth but as the base of support for future generations. The root of our present tendency to pursue individual pleasure and material well-being at the expense of communal and broader societal well-being is the issue that lies at the heart of this comparative study of three peoples who pioneered the American frontiers."--BOOK JACKET.
subjects: Farm life, Frontier and pioneer life, History, Frontier and pioneer life, west (u.s.), Farm life, united states, Willamette river valley, Idaho, history, Utah, history
Places: Boise River Valley, Boise River Valley (Idaho), Idaho, Oregon, Utah, Utah Lake Region, Utah Lake Region (Utah), Willamette River Valley, Willamette River Valley (Or.)
Times: 19th century