
This intimate memoir invites listeners into a mid‑19th‑century experiment in communal living on a New England farm. The author, a young participant, recounts the community’s two distinct phases—an early transcendental period focused on education, shared labor, and philosophical discussion, followed by a later industrial phase that tried to incorporate emerging social‑science ideas and mechanized work. Written from personal notes and recollections, the narrative preserves the hopes, routines, and everyday struggles of those who sought to blend mind and hand in a cooperative venture.
Set against a backdrop of religious reform, growing abolitionist sentiment, and a restless search for more humane social structures, the memoir paints vivid scenes of lectures, debates, and the simple chores that bound the community together. It reveals both the optimism that drew many of the era’s most cultivated minds to the farm and the practical challenges they faced as idealism met the realities of labor and economics. Listeners will hear a thoughtful reflection on how those early experiments still echo in today’s conversations about cooperation, equity, and the balance between individual freedom and collective responsibility.
Language
en
Duration
~9 hours (534K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2005-04-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

An American clergyman and writer, he turned years of travel and observation into lively books about ships, sea routes, and everyday life in distant places.
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