Firth Haring Fabend

Firth Haring Fabend is the author of "A Dutch Family in the Middle Colonies 1660-1800" (Rutgers University Press), winner of the New York State Historical Association Annual Book Award and the Hendricks Prize of the New Netherland Project.

Land So Fair (Paperback)

$20.95
ISBN-13: 9780595473168
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Published: iUniverse, 1/2008
Four generations of a Dutch-American family struggle to survive on their farms in the Hudson Valley of New York and New Jersey against a background of slavery, boundary disputes and land grabs, religious controversy, and the havoc and devastation of the American Revolution. Told through the characters of three related women, Land So Fair is an outgrowth of the author's prize-winning work A Dutch Family in the Middle Colonies, 1660-1800 (Rutgers University Press, 2000), and her historical poem A Catch of Grandmothers (2004).

$50.00
ISBN-13: 9780813527710
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Published: Rutgers University Press, 3/2000
The Dutch came to the New World in the seventeenth century as explorers and traders, but religion soon followed, for it was accepted in the Netherlands that state and church were mutually benefited by advancing the "true Christian religion." The influence of "Dutchness"- defined as loyalty to what are presumed to be the distinctive qualities of Dutch national character and culture-persistence in New York and new Jersey for more than two hundred years after Dutch emigration ended. Why? Firth Haring Fabend finds the explanation in the devotion of the Reformed Dutch Church membership to the doctrines and traditions of their religion. She looks at both the larger themes in American history and at the beliefs and behaviors of individuals in this often-neglected ethnic group. Thus, Zion on the Hudson presents both a broad and an intimate look at the way one mainstream Protestant denomination dealt with the transformative events of the evangelical era. As Fabend describes the efforts of the descendents of the Dutch settlers to preserve the European standards and traditions of their church while developing a taste for a new kind of theology and a preference for an American identity, she documents how Dutchness finally became a historical memory. The Americanization of the Reformed Dutch Church, Fabend writes, is a microcosm of the story of the Americanization of the United States itself.

$25.00
ISBN-13: 9780813526904
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Published: Rutgers University Press, 1/1999
Novelist and museum consultant Fabend, a direct descendant of the original Haring settler, follows five generations of the family of New York and New Jersey in an attempt to uncover the economic, political, and religious underpinnings of the middle colonies. Researching court, tax, and probate records, she finds that the Harings in America reflected their Dutch origins: they were entrepreneurial farmers who lived in nuclear families and acted in their economic and political self interest. She also verifies the conclusions of family historians of the last 20 years who have documented colonial demographic patterns which bear resemblance to current trends. Though overstating the Harings's representative stature and relying upon such post-agrarian concepts as class to analyze colonial America, the author provides a much-needed investigation of life in the middle colonies. This book will appeal to colonial, family, and social historians.-- David Szatmary, Univ. of Washington, Seattle.