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Unearthing
the Land
The Story of Ohio's
Scioto Marsh
by Tom Rumer
290 pp.,
illustrations, maps,
bibliography, index
Paper
978-1-884836-52-7; $24.95 SALE: $16.95
Ohio History and Culture
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Order online through our distributor, Atlas Books, or by calling 1-800-247-6553
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| The Scioto Marsh in
Hardin County, Ohio, was once an immense swamp, teeming with vegetation
and wildlife. It was drained in the 1880s to grow vegetables, most
notably onions. For decades, hundreds of workers crawled across the
fields, hunched over half-mile rows of onions, potatoes, and other
crops grown on the tabletop-flat fields of black muck in the
18,000-acre basin.
A much-publicized
labor strike erupted during the broiling, violent summer of 1934,
breaking the monotony of field work for that season. But the marsh had
already begun showing the signs of exploitation--the rich organic soil
was evaporating in astounding, incalculable tonnage. Once as deep as a
tall pioneer, the muck was now little more than a foot thick.
Unearthing the Land
is a century's view of former natural diversity altered by the
"progress" of agriculture. Here, in typically American fashion, are the
people who migrated to this place to work, many seeking a better life
than offered by the Kentucky coal mines; here, too, are the few who
prospered. And here, within the modern context of environmental
concerns, is the story of nature's will to retain primal tendencies
which still haunt today's fields of carrots and grain crops.
Modern themes of
national importance play throughout the story of the Scioto Marsh. From
prehistory to the present, the marsh is a compelling backdrop for
considering today's essential concerns about land use and environmental
responsibility.
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Thomas
A. Rumer, a native of
Kenton, Ohio, is a freelance writer and public historian for the Carmel
Clay Historical Association. He received his B.S. and M.A. degrees in
history and English from Ball State University and his M.L.S. from
Indiana University. He has published five books, including This
Emigrating Company: The 1844 Oregon Trail Journal of Jacob Hunter
and The American Legion: An Official History. His
work has also appeared in Indianapolis Monthly and Indiana Magazine of
History.
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