Adirondack Life – September 2019

(Dana P.) #1

68 ADIRONDACK LIFE September + October 2019


ness was not neutral. It was regressive.
It imperiled the good and growth of the
community. The fellow who trashed his
farm would do the same thing in the
woods—defy fish-and-game laws, tres-
pass, vandalize and set fires.
Nothing especially Adirondackish
about these fears. In the South, they were
an old refrain. After the Civil War, white
supremacists opined long and confi-
dently about freedpeople’s incapacity for
self-betterment and independent living;
their innately shiftless nature and unre-
sourceful ways would keep them poor
forever, and that went for the “white
trash,” too, whose feeble bloodlines
doomed them to a “sedimentary” fate.
The northern version of this, famously,
was a New York sociologist’s 1877 report
on the doomed Jukes clan, an upstate
Dutch-descended family of 700-some
New Yorkers whose criminals, broth-
el-keepers, prostitutes, relief recipients
and hard cases of “feeble-mindedness”
were reported to have cost taxpayers
over a million dollars. In the next decade,
Adirondack editors would regale readers
with many variants of the Jukes, like “The
Florida Cracker,” “a gaunt, pale, clay-col-
ored creature, [whose] shifting slouch-
ing manner [suggested] a sort of dead-
alive mummy,” and the “Clay Eaters” of
North Carolina, a “peculiarly cadaverous,
lank, half-alive class of people,” and the
“semi-barbarous denizens” of Kentucky
[who] “marry and intermarry with each
other,” resulting in a “country crowded
with idiots [where] law is unknown and
justice is a farce.”
Accounts of Adirondack poverty were
never quite this lurid, but they could
be very cold. Foreign work crews in the
employ of the railroads, lumber barons
and the mines were assailed in Adiron-
dack papers for their presumed indif-
ference to the rule of law and custom,
and native, self-employed “pot” hunters
and fishermen roused suspicion, too.
“Belonging to a careless, shiftless class,”
said state forestry superintendent Wil-
liam F. Fox of Adirondack woodsmen in
1904, “they straggle aimlessly through
the forests, camping out wherever night
overtakes them.... [T]hey generally leave
their campfires burning.” The 1903 mur-
der, never solved,

A POOR VIEW

| Continued on page 72

The DR® TRIMMER MOWER gives you
5X the power and NONE of the back-
strain of hand-held trimmers!
TRIMS & MOWS thick grass and weeds without bogging down—
the only trimmer guaranteed not to wrap!
ROLLS LIGHT AS A FEATHER on big, easy-rolling wheels!
THICKEST, LONGEST-LASTING cutting cord (up to 255 mil)
takes seconds to change.

The EASY


DR


®
Way to

Trim & Mow!


DRtrimmers.com
877-200-6581

Go Online or Call for FREE DVD & Catalog!


TFORELEL
SOME LIMITATIONS APPLY
Go online or call for details.

FREE SHIPPING
1 YEAR TRIAL

* Assembled in the USA using domestic and foreign parts.

TOW-BEHIND MODELS TOO!

The ORIGINAL Trimmer on Wheels! 1 A
32
3 X

©

20

19
Free download pdf