
John Warner Barber’s Views of Connecticut Towns, 1834-36
Edited Christopher P. Bickford, J. Bard McNulty
Sales Date: 1990-06-30
160 Pages, 6.00 x 9.00 in
The earliest known images of many Connecticut towns
This charming volume is a collection of ink washes produced by engraver and historian John Warner Barber (1798–1885), each depicting a specific locale in a Connecticut town. Barber, possibly the first popular American historian, created these drawings in preparation for producing wood engravings to be included in his book Connecticut Historical Collections (1836), one of the first popular local histories in the US. In creating these drawings, Barber sought realism, but also to portray the beauty in rural nature and the peacefulness and harmony of life in small-town Connecticut. The drawings, most never published before, are accompanied by contemporary descriptions of the view and buildings, and the changes that have occurred there since the mid-nineteenth century.
John Warner Barber Sketching
Foreword
John Warner Barber: Historian for the Plain People
"Drawings Taken On the Spot"
Map
Sketches of Ashford through Woodstock
Views in Various Townships in Connecticut and the Day on Which Each View Was Taken
Checklist
Names of Members
CHRISTOPHER P. BICKFORD has served as the director of the Connecticut Historical Society, and is the author of several books on the history of Connecticut, including Farmington in Connecticut (1982) and Voices of the New Republic: Connecticut Towns 1800-1832 (2004). He lives in Providence, Rhode Island. J. BARD MCNULTY is professor emeritus of English at Trinity College, and author of several books on the cultural history of Connecticut, including Connecticut Observed (1999), written with Richard Buel Jr. McNulty lives in Glastonbury, Connecticut.