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Eight
Months in Illinois With
Information to Immigrants William
Oliver New
Foreword by James E. Davis
March
2002 paper,
0-8093-2437-7, $15.00t 264
pages, 5 1/2 x 8 Illinois / American History
A Shawnee Classic
The
Illinois frontier offered abundant opportunity, noted English traveler
William Oliver after his journey to America in 1841-42, but life there was
hard. Accordingly, Oliver advised the wealthy and comfortable to remain in
England and counseled the unprosperous to seek their fortunes in America.
Written for the poor who would migrate and published in 1843, his Eight
Months in Illinois: With Information to Immigrants sought
only to provide pertinent, valid, and practical information about what
people might encounter in the frontier state. What Oliver actually
accomplished, however, was much more: he imparted invaluable insights into
and analyses of American life during an era of sweeping social, economic,
and political change.
In
his new foreword to this edition, James E. Davis stresses Oliver’s
sincere desire to help British immigrants succeed in America. Oliver,
Davis notes, “devoted dozens of pages of advice on numerous matters:
various routes to Illinois and their advantages and disadvantages,
processes of settling, qualities of western houses, costs of obtaining a
new farm.” Oliver discussed
other practical matters, such as the importance of having sons. He also
assured his intended readership that “in the West, distinction of
classes is little known and seldom recognized.”
As
a document covering the middle west in the 1840s, Eight
Months in Illinois: With Information to Immigrants
has few equals. Its portrayal of farming and trade in relatively primitive
times is historically accurate. It paints a plain picture, laying out the
essential facts and presenting the typical incidents that enable us to
trace the course of a settler’s simple, diligent, laborious day-to-day
life. According to Davis, Oliver depicted “accurate and balanced slices
of life in Illinois and America, including nasty insects, crude
conditions, and the necessity of work.” And he did so without a trace of
anti-American bias.
Eight
Months in Illinois with Information to Immigrants was reprinted with
emendations in 1924 by Walter Hill.
James E. Davis is the author of Frontier Illinois; Frontier America, 1800-1840: A Comparative Demographic Analysis of the Settlement Process; and Dreams to Dust.
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