As Common Lands, Common People describes beautifully, the march of 'progress' [in New England] was slowed by the nascent environmentalists of Maine, Vermont and New Hampshire standing up to big businesses of the day. The beauty of these states today is thanks to the pressure of these early conservationists--who were not, the author suggests, an elitist group drawn from the upper echelons of society as some historians contend, but the 'common people' of the title. The writing is vivid and the history thorough. * New Scientist *
This book offers an important new view of the history of environmentalism in the United States that focuses on northern New England, including Massachusetts, from the late eighteenth century to the Progressive reforms of the early twentieth century...By focusing on the attitudes of the common people who lived and worked the land as well as the adjacent forests and waterways, Judd offers a useful corrective to our prevailing understanding, which sees the consecration movement primarily as an expression of elite concerns. This is a most interesting and informative study of the political economy of nature, the origins of conservation, and the multiple uses of natural resources. -- Hal S. Barron * American Historical Review *
A well-written, detailed analysis of the rise of a conservation ethic in northern New England. Judd weaves the natural history of the land and water with mid-19th-century culture superbly...This historical account will be very valuable to anyone who is interested in land use, conservation, and public attitudes toward nature, and believes that the past plays a significant role in the present and future. -- S. M. Tang * Choice *
Richard W. Judd's social history of the origins of the conservation ethic in northern New England is refreshing and enlightening. Refreshing, for Judd identifies first with the commonly held views of the citizens whose interests and judgments have directly shaped attitudes and policies toward the use of commonly held natural resources, while the cast of politicians, bureaucrats, scientists, corporate leaders, and social elite appear, secondarily, often in somewhat distant, ineffectual roles. By challenging environmental historians to 'look more closely at the people who used these resources,' Judd offers a fresh perspective on the evolution of conservation consciousness. He credits the intelligence and wisdom of ordinary rural citizens while questioning the familiar claim that conservation has been mainly the concern of the urban elite. -- Thomas D. Visser * New England Quarterly *
This is one of the most significant studies of American conservation history to appear in the past quarter century. Although it deals with obscure local conflicts over natural resources in remote corners of northern New England roughly a century ago, the controversies it narrates could hardly be more relevant to comparable debates going on today. Anyone interested the past and future of the environmental movement should read this book. -- William Cronon, University of Wisconsin-Madison
An important contribution to the history of New England and a new account, and a new kind of account, of conservation. No previous work has attempted such a fine-grained analysis of regional thought and action in the period before conservation became a national political program. It shows, in ways we only suspected before, the connections between local thought and established ideas of common rights and local land use on the one hand and evolving policies that accommodated market values on the other. It will be indispensable for anyone working on land use, conservation, and popular attitudes toward nature in nineteenth century America. -- Thomas R. Dunlap, Texas A&M University
This book easily attains its first goal. Judd has thoroughly mined a wide array of primary sources to reveal the attitudes of common people toward their environment, and he deftly interweaves secondary sources to show points of both agreement and disagreement. The writing is sharp, and the illustrations help to convey his points. -- Kurk Dorsey * Historical New Hampshire *