In Old Narragansett

Alice Morse Earle (1851 - 1911)

"Some of these stories of old Narragansett are familiar fireside tales to those who have lived in that picturesque land; some are but vague traditions, others summer dreams; a few are family chronicles; still others are outlined in that interesting memoir, Thomas R. Hazard’s “Recollections of the Olden Times,” or in Updike’s “Narragansett Church.” Old Narragansett was, properly, all the lands occupied by the Narragansett Indians at the coming of the English. Narragansett is now, popularly, the coast sweep of the western shore of Narragansett Bay from Wickford to Point Judith. In 1685 Narragansett was made a separate government apart from Rhode Island, and was called the Kings Province. When reunited with Rhode Island this was changed to King’s County. For many years, and by some old people to-day, it is called the South County, but its legal name is Washington County, which was given it in 1781; Washington being a more agreeable and tolerable name at that date to loyal Americans than King’s. Narragansett was owned by a comparatively small number of persons, and estates were large, one family owned a tract nine miles long and three wide. Thomas Stanton had a “lordship” four and a half miles long and two wide. Colonel Champlin owned two thousand acres, Thomas Hazard twelve thousand acres. Farms of five, six, even ten miles square existed.

Thus the conditions of life in colonial Narragansett were widely different from those of other New England colonies. The establishment of and adherence to the Church of England, and the universal prevalence of African slavery, evolved a social life resembling that of the Virginian plantation rather than of the Puritan farm. It was a community of many superstitions, to which the folk-customs of the feast-days of the English Church, the evil communications of witch-seeking Puritan neighbors, the voodooism of the negro slaves, the pow wows of the native red men, all added a share and infinite variety. It was a plantation of wealth, of vast flocks and herds, of productive soil, of great crops, of generous living; all these are vanished from the life there to-day, but still the fields are smiling and the lakes and the bay are blue and beautiful as of yore; and a second prosperity is dawning in the old Kings Province in the universal establishment therein of happy summer-homes.

In memory of many perfect days spent on Narragansett roads and lanes, of days in Narragansett woods or on the shore, these pages have been written." - Summary by Alice Morse Earle from the Preface.

Genre(s): Culture & Heritage Fiction, Short Stories

Language: English

Section Chapter Reader Time
Play 01 A Narragansett Elopement ktslinger
00:23:29
Play 02 Narragansett Weavers Ted Lienhart
00:36:27
Play 03 Where Three Towns Meet Stunning
00:12:11
Play 04 Tuggie Bannocks’s Moonack Usacoder
00:17:34
Play 05 A Black Politician Usacoder
00:36:21
Play 06 The Witch Sheep Lee Vogler
00:20:28
Play 07 The Crusoes of the Noon-House Ted Lienhart
00:20:08
Play 08 The Doctor’s Pie-Plates brenda8mac
00:14:24
Play 09 My Delft Apothecary Jars lberla
00:18:35
Play 10 The Dancing Turkey lberla
00:13:00
Play 11 Cuddymonk’s Ghost ktslinger
00:17:12