Frontiersmen of the Adirondacks: Economic Development in Early North America
Reverence for the past and its principal actors tends to be universal and they become heroic figures to posterity in the passage of time.

We Americans know too little of the doings of the people of past generations who lived their lives in our several localities. We all know that the “Red Man” once lived here, hunting and fishing for a living and constantly engaging in inter-tribal wars. We know that in New York State the “White Man,” our forbears, followed them, first the Dutchman and afterward the Englishman. These pioneers selected land for their farms and bore the hardships of an isolated and primitive life with the wild beasts always and the Indians often as enemies.

They finally fought a war with their kinsmen across the seas to establish their right to live their own lives in their own way without interference from the homeland. They made a new government that has served as a model for the entire world since.

This knowledge is vague enough with most of us but it is so generally diffused that it unifies the country in the consciousness of a common origin, a common surmounting of dangers and a common destiny. It makes for a patriotic citizenry.

When this knowledge is supplemented by adequate information concerning the history of country, state and their subdivisions down to the story of the neighborhood’s traditional hero, the patriotic reaction is deeper; resulting from the knowledge of these old time individuals’ doings that have a far-reaching effect on posterity for different reasons.

It is a high duty for each generation of men to record its own doings in order that those of the future may use them as a guide for emulation or avoidance.
1115862855
Frontiersmen of the Adirondacks: Economic Development in Early North America
Reverence for the past and its principal actors tends to be universal and they become heroic figures to posterity in the passage of time.

We Americans know too little of the doings of the people of past generations who lived their lives in our several localities. We all know that the “Red Man” once lived here, hunting and fishing for a living and constantly engaging in inter-tribal wars. We know that in New York State the “White Man,” our forbears, followed them, first the Dutchman and afterward the Englishman. These pioneers selected land for their farms and bore the hardships of an isolated and primitive life with the wild beasts always and the Indians often as enemies.

They finally fought a war with their kinsmen across the seas to establish their right to live their own lives in their own way without interference from the homeland. They made a new government that has served as a model for the entire world since.

This knowledge is vague enough with most of us but it is so generally diffused that it unifies the country in the consciousness of a common origin, a common surmounting of dangers and a common destiny. It makes for a patriotic citizenry.

When this knowledge is supplemented by adequate information concerning the history of country, state and their subdivisions down to the story of the neighborhood’s traditional hero, the patriotic reaction is deeper; resulting from the knowledge of these old time individuals’ doings that have a far-reaching effect on posterity for different reasons.

It is a high duty for each generation of men to record its own doings in order that those of the future may use them as a guide for emulation or avoidance.
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Frontiersmen of the Adirondacks: Economic Development in Early North America

Frontiersmen of the Adirondacks: Economic Development in Early North America

by Cyrus Durey
Frontiersmen of the Adirondacks: Economic Development in Early North America

Frontiersmen of the Adirondacks: Economic Development in Early North America

by Cyrus Durey

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Overview

Reverence for the past and its principal actors tends to be universal and they become heroic figures to posterity in the passage of time.

We Americans know too little of the doings of the people of past generations who lived their lives in our several localities. We all know that the “Red Man” once lived here, hunting and fishing for a living and constantly engaging in inter-tribal wars. We know that in New York State the “White Man,” our forbears, followed them, first the Dutchman and afterward the Englishman. These pioneers selected land for their farms and bore the hardships of an isolated and primitive life with the wild beasts always and the Indians often as enemies.

They finally fought a war with their kinsmen across the seas to establish their right to live their own lives in their own way without interference from the homeland. They made a new government that has served as a model for the entire world since.

This knowledge is vague enough with most of us but it is so generally diffused that it unifies the country in the consciousness of a common origin, a common surmounting of dangers and a common destiny. It makes for a patriotic citizenry.

When this knowledge is supplemented by adequate information concerning the history of country, state and their subdivisions down to the story of the neighborhood’s traditional hero, the patriotic reaction is deeper; resulting from the knowledge of these old time individuals’ doings that have a far-reaching effect on posterity for different reasons.

It is a high duty for each generation of men to record its own doings in order that those of the future may use them as a guide for emulation or avoidance.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940016510170
Publisher: Signature, Inc.
Publication date: 06/26/2013
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 48
File size: 441 KB

About the Author

Cyrus Durey (May 16, 1864 – January 4, 1933) wrote a history of Fulton County, New York around 1920 that covered the American Colonial and Revolutionary War periods in the foothills of the Adirondack Mountains from which this book is based upon.

Durey was elected to the Sixtieth and Sixty-first Congresses (March 4, 1907 - March 3, 1911). He was appointed on March 20, 1911, collector of internal revenue, fourteenth district of New York, and served until September 30, 1914. He was again appointed collector of internal revenue on September 30, 1921, and served until his death at Albany, New York, January 4, 1933.

The author had a large lumber mill on Canada Lake and split his time between Albany and his house on Pine Lake.

He was interred in North Bush Cemetery, near Johnstown, New York.
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