Walden Pond: A History

Front Cover
Oxford University Press, 2004 M02 12 - 416 pages
Perhaps no other natural setting has as much literary, spiritual, and environmental significance for Americans as Walden Pond. Some 700,000 people visit the pond annually, and countless others journey to Walden in their mind, to contemplate the man who lived there and what the place means to us today. Here is the first history of the Massachusetts pond Thoreau made famous 150 years ago. W. Barksdale Maynard offers a lively and comprehensive account of Walden Pond from the early nineteenth century to the present. From Thoreau's first visit at age 4 in 1821--"That woodland vision for a long time made the drapery of my dreams"--to today's efforts both to conserve the pond and allow public access, Maynard captures Walden Pond's history and the role it has played in social, cultural, literary, and environmental movements in America. Along the way Maynard details the geography of the pond; Thoreau's and Emerson's experiences of Walden over their lifetimes; the development of the cult of Thoreau and the growth of the pond as a site of literary and spiritual pilgrimages; rock star Don Henley's Walden Woods Project and the much publicized battle to protect the pond from developers in the 1980s; and the vitally important ecological symbol Walden Pond has become today. Exhaustively researched, vividly written, and illustrated with historical photographs and the most detailed maps of Thoreau country yet created, Walden Pond: A History reveals how an ordinary pond has come to be such an extraordinarily inspiring symbol.
 

Contents

In Morning Time
1
Visited at All Seasons 18211834
15
Intellectual Grove 18351844
29
Far Off As I Lived 18451847
63
Viewed from a Hilltop 18481854
95
Walden Wood Was My Forest Walk 18551861
121
All Honest Pilgrims 18621882
153
Thoreaus Country 18831921
191
Walden Breezes 19221959
229
In These Days of Confusion and Turmoil 19601989
265
waldenorg 19902003
301
Abbreviations
335
Notes
337
Bibliography
363
Index
389
Copyright

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Ken Albala
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About the author (2004)

W. Barksdale Maynard teaches architectural history at Johns Hopkins University and the University of Delaware and is the author of Architecture in the United States, 1800-1850. He has served as a consultant for The Walden Woods Project and was a visiting scholar at the Thoreau Institute at Walden Woods. He lives in Newark, Delaware.

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