Jeremiah Hacker: Journalist, Anarchist, Abolitionist
Rebecca M. Pritchard
Jeremiah Hacker: Journalist, Anarchist, Abolitionist
Price: $15.00 pbk. History, Political Science 6X9; 126 p.; 7 b&w illus. ISBN: 9781642510065 Read a Q&A with Rebecca about writing, this book, and what's coming next
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"In Jeremiah Hacker: Journalist, Anarchist, Abolitionist, Pritchard brings alive Hacker’s responses to the issues of the United States as they played out in Portland, Maine. She places him appropriately within the context of nineteenth‐century reformers and radicals. But also, through his observations and arguments, she reminds us of the timelessness of his appeals."
Beth Taylor, Friends Journal “Jeremiah Hacker: Journalist, Anarchist, Abolitionist opens a window on a fascinating Maine original, as well as on a whole era of thought, social justice, religion, women’s rights, reform and farming. Maine’s 19th century Jeremiah Hacker and his vehement convictions are at last unbound." William David Barry, Portland Press Herald "We had much rather be all alone in the right than with the whole world in the wrong.” So wrote Jeremiah Hacker in 1862. He was the main writer and editor of The Pleasure Boat, which may have the distinction of being Portland, Maine’s most controversial newspaper. Inspired by his Quaker background, Hacker worked to end slavery, poverty, and inequality of women through his writing. He spoke out against prisons, advocating instead for reform and education. He broke with all forms of organized religion and urged people to leave their churches and find moral direction from within. He promoted no political party, believing people would be better off without government. He was in favor of land for all. The most controversial of Hacker’s radical ideas, however—and the one that lost him the most readers—was his advocacy for peace as the country headed toward Civil War. Hacker’s life spanned the nineteenth century (1801-1895). His work was widely read and he himself was well-known in his lifetime. But both he and his ideas have largely been forgotten—until now. This book explores the life and writings of Jeremiah Hacker, returning him to his rightful place in history, and showing how his words were an important part of what helped to forge that history. |
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More Reviews and Publicity
"Jeremiah Hacker is not more than a footnote in Portland’s history, let alone Maine’s history. But examining his work as a crusading journalist through the middle of the 19th century opens a window on a world wrestling with slavery, brutal prisons, poverty without social safety nets, a rising but ruthless industrial economy, and the decline of the family farm and the moral and social values embedded in that change....Jeremiah Hacker: Journalist, Anarchist, Abolitionist, [is] an engaging and colorful read, much like its subject." Tom Groening, The Working Waterfront "Hacker was the editor and publisher of two newspapers, The Pleasure Boat (published between 1845 and 1862) and The Chariot of Wisdom and Love (1864-1866). He was a pacifist, an abolitionist who boycotted any goods produced by slave labor, an estranged Quaker turned Spiritualist and a proto-anarchist—he never used the term, Pritchard says, but his ideas about a society ordered by individual morals rather than government and laws closely mirror those of Emma Goldman and others a few decades later." Liz Graves, Mount Desert Islander "Often on the edge of poverty, he lived on bread and water in a boarding house on Cross Street, where he wrote his paper, The Portland Pleasure Boat, every week on his knee, assailing the institutions of government, capitalism, slavery, prisons and organized religion. Although Hacker had devoted readers throughout the country, historians have largely ignored him. Fortunately, Maine journalist Rebecca M. Pritchard has breathed new life into Hacker’s iconoclastic writings in her wonderful new book, Jeremiah Hacker: Journalist, Anarchist, Abolitionist." Andy O’Brien, Mainer What advance readers are saying: "Rebecca Pritchard has crafted a vivid portrait of one of mid-nineteenth-century America’s most colorful public figures. Jeremiah Hacker--teacher, itinerant preacher, journalist-publisher and uncompromising reformer—roamed city streets his ear trumpet in hand. His deafness proved no impediment to a life of impressive moral activism. Pritchard skillfully reconstructs the life of a now forgotten reformer, but she accomplishes much more. She situates Hacker’s wide-ranging commitment to reform in the hothouse of pre-Civil War idealism. Pritchard tells a remarkable story in engaging, lively prose." Joseph Conforti, author of Imagining New England and Jonathan Edwards, Religious Tradition, and American Culture "What a Yankee Original! Jeremiah Hacker was a two-fisted fighting Quaker, a cranky crusader with a self-propelled pen and a critical eye for the world's weaknesses. He launched his newspaper The Pleasure Boat to assail the world's sins and shortcomings, sparing no one and nothing. Now, thanks to author Rebecca Pritchard, Hacker' s long-ago voyages are between covers for the first time. Well-written, full of anecdotes and surprises, Pritchard brings the street preacher and shrewd printer to life, and in her hands sprightly good company he is! Anyone who cruised on The Pleasure Boat never forgot it—and neither will you." Herb Adams, Adjunct Professor of History at Southern Maine Community College and former Maine State Legislator "Hacker was an intense, kind, absolutely committed activist for fairness, decency, and peace who never compromised his values even slightly in his ninety-four years. His uplifting, sometimes funny story shows by example that anyone who devotes all of themselves to the common good can change a piece of the world in a lasting and important way. This is a beautiful book about a beautiful man. Read it and gain strength from it." Robert P. Helms, editor of The Collected Radical Addresses to the Unity Congregation (1888-1891) by Hugh Owen Pentecost |
Rebecca M. Pritchard
Rebecca M. Pritchard studied writing at the Salt Institute in Portland, Maine, and American & New England Studies at the University of Southern Maine. In school, she became interested in the stories buried in old newspapers and spent her time in libraries poring over their wrinkled pages. She has worked for the Maine Historical Society, the Abbe Museum, and Acadia National Park. She currently lives with her husband and daughter in upstate New York. |