TEN ACRES ENOUGH
Reprint of chapter from 1864 book about city folk adjusting to the country lifestyle.
I don't know who said it first, but he or she was
absolutely right: The more things change, the more they
stay the same. Take today's "new" back to the land
movement, for instance. It isn't new at all. The whole
history of this country is founded on one back to the land
movement after another, dating from the growth of the first
towns established on this continent. In short, as long as
great numbers of people have flocked to our cities, a
lesser number of (possibly more intelligent) folks have
been trying to getaway from them.
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Nor have the details of this constantly self renewing swap
changed in the slightest. Big farmers have always been
squeezed out of the country by even bigger ones (and the
lure of those "easy" dollars in town). And back to the
landers have always had a struggle getting enough money
together to buy their little dream place out in the sticks.
And they've always felt that most of the chunks of property
offered to them "out there" are too big, or too small, or
too expensive. And they've always worried about what life
would be like once they really made the break and left the
city behind. And they've always at least the ones dedicated
enough to roll up their sleeves and make a life for
themselves out in the country been damn glad in later years
that they made the switch. ,
You don't believe it? You don't think that the very same
problems you're now facing have been faced ten times ten
thousand times before? Then you haven't read the history of
this country as it was written by the people who've gone
before.
Here, for instance (thanks to Mrs. Joe E. Hanauer of Dixon,
Missouri), is an excerpt from Ten Acres Enough a book
penned by a fellow named James Miller away back in 1864.
Sure, the prices were lower back then but everything Mr.
Miller had to say 112 years ago is still being said in
almost exactly the same words by the average homesteader of
1976.
As the old saying goes, "The more things change ."
CITY EXPERIENCES MODERATE EXPECTATIONS
My life, up to the age of forty, had been spent in my
native city of Philadelphia. Like thousands of others
before me, I began the world without a dollar, and with a
very few friends in a condition to assist me. Having saved
a few hundred dollars by dint of close application to
business, and avoiding taverns, oyster houses, theatres,
and fashionable tailors, I married and went into business
the same year.
These two contemporaneous drafts upon my little capital
proving heavier than I expected, they soon used it up,
leaving me thereafter greatly straitened for means.
It is true my business kept me, but as it was constantly
expanding, and was of such a nature that a large proportion
of my annual gain was necessarily invested in tools,
fixtures, and machinery, I was nearly always short of ready
cash to carry on my operations with comfort. At certain
times, also, it ceased to be profitable.
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