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portada A Journey Through Texas: Or a Saddle-Trip on the Southwestern Frontier
Type
Physical Book
Introduction by
Publisher
Year
2004
Language
English
Pages
539
Format
Paperback
Dimensions
20.4 x 14.0 x 2.9 cm
Weight
0.59 kg.
ISBN
0803286201
ISBN13
9780803286207
Edition No.
1

A Journey Through Texas: Or a Saddle-Trip on the Southwestern Frontier

Frederick Law Olmsted (Author) · Witold Rybczynski (Introduction by) · Bison Books · Paperback

A Journey Through Texas: Or a Saddle-Trip on the Southwestern Frontier - Olmsted, Frederick Law ; Rybczynski, Witold

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Synopsis "A Journey Through Texas: Or a Saddle-Trip on the Southwestern Frontier"

Before he became America's foremost landscape architect, Frederick Law Olmsted (1822-1903) was by turns a surveyor, merchant seaman, farmer, magazine publisher, and traveling newspaper correspondent. In 1856-57 he took a saddle trip through Texas to see the country and report on its lands and peoples. His description of the Lone Star State on the eve of the Civil War remains one of the best accounts of the American West ever published. Unvarnished by sentiment or myth making, based on firsthand observations, and backed with statistical research, Olmsted's narrative captures the manners, foods, entertainments, and conversations of the Texans, as well as their housing, agriculture, business, exotic animals, changeable weather, and the pervasive influence of slavery. Back and forth from the Sabine to the Rio Grande, through San Augustine, Nacogdoches, San Marcos, San Antonio, Neu-Braunfels, Fredericksburg, Lavaca, Indianola, Goliad, Castroville, La Grange, Houston, Harrisburg, and Beaumont, Olmsted rode and questioned and listened and reported. Texas was then already a multiethnic and multiracial state, where Americans, Germans, Mexicans, Africans, and Indians of numerous tribes mixed uneasily. Olmsted interviewed planters, scouts, innkeepers, bartenders, housewives, drovers, loafers, Indian chiefs, priests, runaway slaves, and emigrants and refugees from every part of the known world--most of whom had gone to Texas looking for a fresh start. He also observed the breathtaking arrival of spring on the prairie and the starry nights that seemed to prove the truth of the German saying "The sky seems nearer in Texas."

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