Touted as an American Eden, Kentucky provides one of the most dramatic
social histories of early America.
In this collection, ten contributors trace the evolution of Kentucky
from First West to Early Republic. The authors tell the stories of the
state's remarkable settlers and inhabitants: Indians, African Americans,
working-class men and women, wealthy planters and struggling farmers.
Eager settlers built defensive forts across the countryside, while women
and slaves used revivalism to create new opportunities for themselves in
a white, patriarchal society. The world that this diverse group of
people made was both a society uniquely Kentuckian and a microcosm of
the unfolding American pageant. In the mid-1700s, the trans-Appalachian
region gained a reputation for its openness, innocence, and rusticity-
fertile ground for an agrarian republic founded on the virtue of the
yeoman ideal.
By the nineteenth century, writers of history would characterize the
state as a breeding ground for an American culture of distinctly
Anglo-Saxon origin. Modern historians, however, now emphasize exploring
the entire human experience, rather than simply the political history,
of the region. An unusual blend of social, economic, political,
cultural, and religious history, this volume goes a long way toward
answering the question posed by a Virginia clergyman in 1775: "What a
buzzel is this amongst people about Kentuck?"