David Hamilton Deep River: A Memoir of a Missouri Farm
University of Missouri Press, 2001
"This magnificently written account of a time now gone
is far more than just a slice of Missouri's rural history. In
its best sections (and there are many), it catches the tone
and mood of a place in a manner worthy of a modern-day Thoreau."
---Bruce Clayton
"Deep River is an extraordinary piece of writing:
memoir, storytelling, historical narrative, and art. Hamilton
skillfully weaves his family's stories into a complex tapestry
of experiences including those of native peoples, slaves and
slave owners, farmers and river people. The stories are loving
and insightful."
---Susan Curtis
Deep River uncovers the layers of history --- both personal
and regional --- that have accumulated on a river-bottom farm
in west-central Missouri. This land was part of a late frontier,
passed over, then developed through the middle of the last century
as the author's father and uncle cleared a portion of it and established
their farm.
Hamilton traces the generations of Native Americans, frontiersmen,
settlers, and farmers who lived on and alongside the bottomland
over the past two centuries. It was a region fought over by Union
militia and Confederate bushwhackers, as well as by their respective
armies; an area that invited speculation and the establishment
of several small towns, both before and after the Civil War; land
on which the Missouri Indians made their long last stand, less
as a military force than as a settlement and civilization; land
that attracted French explorers, the first Europeans to encounter
the Missouris and their relatives, the Ioways, Otoes, and Osage,
a century before Lewis and Clark. It is land with a long history
of occupation and use, extending millennia before the Missouris.
Most recently it was briefly and intensively receptive to farming
before being restored in large part as state-managed wetlands.
Deep River is composed of four sections, each exploring
aspects of the farm and its neighborhood. While the family story
remains central to each, slavery and the Civil War in the nineteenth
century and Native American history in the centuries before that
become major themes as well. The resulting portrait is both personal
memoir and informal history, brought up from layers of time, the
compound of which forms an emblematic American story.
About the Author
David Hamilton is Professor of English at the University of Iowa
in Iowa City. He is the editor of The Iowa Review
and Hard Choices: An Iowa Review Reader.
October 2001, 176 pages, 6 x 9, bibliography, maps, 12 illustrations,
ISBN 0-8262-1354-5, $24.95
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