[250 years ago this week, Rhode Island banned the slave trade. That significant moment was just one of many in this littlest state’s story, so this week I’ve AmericanStudied a handful of Ocean State histories, leading up to this special post on works through which you can learn more about Rhode Island!]
On five works
that should be on any Little Rhodey reading list.
1)
William McLoughlin, Rhode
Island: A Bicentennial History (1978): From what I can tell, there isn’t
a more recent book-length history of the colony and state, and certainly not
one as comprehensive as McLoughlin’s.
2)
John Barry, Roger
Williams and the Creation of the American Soul: Church, State, and the Birth of
Liberty (2012): I hope this week’s series has made clear how much more
there is to Rhode Island than just Roger Williams—but there’s no way to tell
the story of the Ocean State that doesn’t include its founder in a prominent role.
Of the many bios and analyses, Barry’s seems particularly interesting in its
sense of what it would mean to likewise see Williams as an American origin point.
3)
S.T. Joshi, I
Am Providence: The Life and Times of H.P. Lovecraft (2013): Weird Tale
expert Joshi published a one-volume bio of Providence’s own Lovecraft in 1996,
but apparently it was significantly cut from his original manuscript; this two-volume
edition captures the full scope of Joshi’s biography of the complex, dark in
every sense, foundational speculative author who is unquestionably Rhode Island’s
most famous literary legacy.
4)
Christy Clark-Pujara, Dark
Work: The Business of Slavery in Rhode Island (2016): I’ve written
multiple times in this space, including in Monday’s post on Roger Williams,
about Wendy Warren’s New
England Bound: Slavery and Colonization in Early America (2016). Perhaps
Warren’s scope is broader than Clark-Pujara’s project (published in the same
year), but that just means they complement each other, with Clark-Pujara able
to dive far more deeply into the histories and legacies of slavery in Rhode
Island.
5)
Sowams
Heritage Area website (2017+): Scholarly and historical writing no longer
happen only in hard-copy publications, of course (and duh, since you’re reading
this blog). After I wrote this July
4th column on Bristol in 2022, I was contacted by Dave
Weed, the historian who runs the Sowams Heritage Area website and publishes
its blog,
newsletter, and other layers to this important local history work. I’ve
learned a lot from Weed and the site, and would recommend them to anyone
interested in Rhode Island histories and stories—which, as I hope this week has
made clear, are all of ours.
Next
series starts Monday,
Ben
PS. What
do you think? Other Ocean State texts or histories you’d highlight?
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