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The Making of Michigan, 1820-1860
A Pioneer Anthology

Edited by Justin L. Kestenbaum
The Making of Michigan is a wide-ranging collection of primary accounts of life in Michigan during the pioneer period, the era from the 1820s to the outbreak of the Civil War. In this time of explosive growth, the state's population increased from 8,000 to 750,000. These emigrants brought the state into the union in 1837 and began to create a set of institutions and a way of life.
Justin Kestenbaum draws on the rich documentary record left by those who sojourned in the state during this time and recorded their impressions. Not only pioneers but land speculators, missionaries, and sight-seers left valuable accounts of the Michigan landscape and its emerging society.
Following a general introduction, the book is divided into six parts: The Interminable Forest, Laying the Foundation, The Great Migration, Education, A Vision of Life, and Political Life, each with its own brief introduction. Notes and a bibliography conclude this valuable resource history.
"A useful and convenient reference source for a wide variety of issues in this defining period of early Michigan history."
Journal of the Early Republic
 
Great Lakes Books Series

$23.95s paper / ISBN 0-8143-1919-X

424 pages

1990