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Friday, August 2, 2024

The Community of True Inspiration at Eben-Ezer

By Paul Lubienecki, PhD
Copyright ©2024 All rights reserved by the author.


The religious persecutions in Europe, particularly in the German-speaking regions during the 18th and 19th centuries, generated a mass influx of religious sects into America. Political and religious turmoil in the German territories produced a wave of immigrants seeking religious freedom, political autonomy, and abundant resources. In the early decades of the 19th century, the idea of a “New Germany” was promoted based on a mixture of paternalism and romantic adventurism. However, the urge to immigrate to the United States centered on the notions of land and liberty in contrast to the distressed conditions and state of affairs in the petty German kingdoms.[1] Religious concerns ultimately decided the issue.

A primary justification for most Germans settling in America was based on their religious convictions. In 1817, Emperor Frederick Wilhelm III sought to secure his rule through a forced merger of the Lutheran and Reformed Churches into the United Evangelical Church of Prussia. He formatted an official United Church Agenda, or liturgical order of service, which prescribed the forms and orders to be followed in all churches. Many of the pastors and churches complied.[2] However, some Lutherans refused to believe this new Church, and its doctrines compromised their religious beliefs and convictions. 


Inspirationists

Many others were already in rebellion with the Lutheran Church for its ritualistic form of worship more akin to Roman Catholicism than Protestant spirituality. A hundred years earlier, two leaders of this dissent within the Lutheran denomination were Eberhard Gruber and Johann Rock. Gruber, a Lutheran clergyman, and Rock, son of a Lutheran minister, founded what was deemed a cult known as the Community of True Inspiration (Wahre Inspirations-Gemeinden).[3]

The Inspirationists believed that God spoke directly to Christians through signs, visions, and a relationship with the believer. They also believed that select community members, or Instruments, were chosen to communicate God’s teaching to the faithful. During moments of inspiration, the Instrument conveyed the word and teachings of God to the community.[4]


The Inspirationists established faith communities throughout Germany, Holland, and Switzerland. As their adherents increased, so did persecution from the civil and religious authorities for their non-conformist ways. With the deaths of Gruber (1728) and Rock (1749), the elders governed the Inspirationists. But the vigor, spiritual enthusiasm, and numbers of the faithful waned.

In 1819, Christian Metz, a 24-year-old carpenter from Ronneburg, declared that he received the “gift of inspiration.” He was not a neophyte to the faith, as his grandfather, Jacob Metz, was already an adherent. Christian was known for his management skills, organizational talents, and fearless spiritual leadership.[5] His persona partially facilitated a revival of the sect.

The community grew with new adherents and the faithful developed a communal lifestyle, much to the consternation of local residents. However, these dissidents continued to incur the persecution of Lutheran church officials as well as the government. Refusal by Inspirationists to obligatory military service resulted in arrests, imprisonment, and even forfeiture of property. As early as the mid-1820s a “prophecy” emerged concerning immigration to the United States where they could openly exercise their beliefs.[6]

The harsh treatment that the Inspirationists endured worsened. The political unrest of the 1840s cast a shadow on this group now regarded as a dangerous minority. Many endured economic hardships, especially tradesmen and craftsmen, as local residents refused to conduct business with them. Most struggled daily just to exist. The case was similar for those who were day laborers, ordinary workmen and unskilled workers. These circumstances created the persuasive conditions for emigrating. That destination would be America. Unfortunately, in late 1840, Metz declared that the “time is not yet fulfilled.” But a continued series of crop failures and famines altered Metz’s convictions. On July 27, 1842, he declared:

“Your goal and your way shall lead towards the west to a land still open 
to you and your faith. I am with you and shall lead you over the sea.”[7]



The New World

On August 27, 1842, the faithful from all the communities gathered at Arnsburg to pray and appoint those who would find an appropriate settlement for the Inspirationists in America. Christian Metz, the 47-year-old spiritual leader of the movement, was selected. Additional members included William Noe, 38 years old, who was proficient in business affairs. Gottlieb Ackerman, 40 years old, was experienced with medical and pharmaceutical matters and George Weber, also 40, was trained as a physician. Metz later declared that a revelation from God occurred and Weber’s 11 year old son, Ferdinand, should accompany them to the New World.[8]

Metz and his group expressed feelings of dread and depression, leaving their homes to find a new one for the community. They acknowledged the burden and responsibility of this mission without certainty of success. The group left Bremerhaven on September 20, 1842, and landed in New York after a difficult thirty-seven-day voyage. During their journey, the ship’s captain, Johann Wächter, learned the purpose of their undertaking and gave them the name of a land agent, George Paulsen, in New York who had experience working with German immigrants on land purchases.[9] Metz viewed this as the work of God since they had no direction on how to proceed once they landed in the New World.

The group’s stay in New York City was brief. During his meeting with Paulsen, Metz inquired about land in Ohio but was advised that it was well settled. Wisconsin was a possibility, but Paulsen advised against it due to the many failed attempts by settlers. Paulsen did know of a large 50,000-acre tract of land in Chautauqua County, New York, and gave him a letter of introduction to Mr. Patterson of Westfield, New York, and additional letters of introduction to other land agents.

The areas of upstate and western New York were ideally suited for Metz and the community's needs. Their beliefs would be tolerated and possibly welcomed in this part of the New World. During the 1820s, western and central New York experienced a series of popular religious revivals that later earned this region the label of the “Burned Over District,” which implied the area was set ablaze with spiritual fervor.[10] During this period, various religious, non-conformist, and spiritual sects such as the Shakers, the Oneida Community, Mormons, Millerites, and others flourished here.[11]

The New World Inspirationists ventured to Albany and then proceeded by barge on the Erie Canal to Buffalo, arriving there November 12, 1842. The group lodged at the Mansion House owned by Philip Dorsheimer. This proved to be providential. While lodging at Mansion House, Metz, Weber, and an interpreter met Patterson. The land agent discussed the benefits and significance of the property in Chautauqua County. Eavesdropping on the conversation, Dorsheimer advised Metz and Weber that Patterson was overvaluing the land. He suggested they examine the Buffalo Creek Indian Reservation as it was good land soon to be opened to white settlement.[12] The location was closer to the larger Buffalo market and the Erie Canal shipping hub. Coincidentally, the other two group members were visiting local German emigres who told them of the land prospects at the Reservation. All agreed to inspect the site.

Metz, Noe, Ackerman, Weber, and Dorsheimer surveyed the area just a few miles south and east of Buffalo. Along Buffalo Creek the group encountered several sawmills and spoke with these businessmen about the industrial prospects of the site. Metz was elated at the vastness of the virgin forest and the uncultivated land.[13] The group had decided to purchase the land but agreed it was advisable to inspect the Chautauqua County tract. Metz and Noe, along with the property agent, traveled some seventy miles throughout the county, but the Inspirationists viewed the Buffalo Creek site as a more favorable where they could establish their colony.

Serious negotiations for the land purchase commenced at the end of November 1842. The initial offering was for 10,000 acres at $10.50 per acre. Delays in the purchase were inevitable, and problems with translating official documents tainted the process. Attorney Thomas Ogden of New York City was the corporate counsel for the Holland Land Company, which owned a three million-acre tract of land in western New York. 

Some of this land was purchased by Tomas and his brother David, who formed the Ogden Land Company. This firm purchased and facilitated the transfer of Native American land to white settlers. Contractual setbacks, legal limitations, and postponements frustrated Metz and his companions. After several weeks of negotiations and delays, some involving third-party advisors, the Inspirationists purchased 5000 acres at $10.00 per acre.[14] Metz concluded that reducing the acreage and lowering the price would facilitate a more straightforward transaction.

During the intervening months since their arrival in America, several other Inspirationists traveled to Buffalo. On May 1, 1843, the four New World Inspirationists left Mansion House for their new property and resided in the former home of Chief John Seneca.



The New Colony

Construction of new housing began quickly and was done by the Inspirationists and non-member contractors. This new settlement, at the present site of Gardenville, was named Eben-Ezer, meaning “stone of help” from the Book of Samuel, chapter 7, verse 12. The name was soon abbreviated to Ebenezer. This particular place was chosen due to its proximity to Buffalo Creek, which provided water power to operate several mills. As the colony rapidly grew, it became apparent that more land and individual space was needed.

Four hamlets were established within the colony to support the settlers and their industries. Middle Ebenezer occupied the area of present day Gardenville. Upper Ebenezer, present-day Blossom, was to the east; Lower Ebenezer, just north of Gardenville in present-day West Seneca and New Ebenezer, was situated between Middle Ebenezer and Upper Ebenezer on Cazenovia Creek.[15]

As more members of the sect arrived, housing construction increased. The land was cleared, timber milled, wells dug, and small farm plots started. However, the local Indian population viewed this as infringing their land rights. Many Native Americans still lived within the settlement, and arguments arose over the use of land and timber. The Germans were confused about the nature of this hostility, believing the land was theirs; however, their colony was settled on reservation land.

The local tribes wanted the Germans to leave the reservation and pay restitution for the use of the land and the lumber they took. The tribes petitioned the Federal government, and negotiations began with the local Indian Agent and the Secretary of War. Settlement negotiations were protracted and often tense, filled with misunderstandings and ignorance of the law over property rights and land use.

On August 1, 1844, the Federal government ruled in favor of the German settlers at the Ebenezer Colony, advising the Seneca Indians that they no longer retained ownership of the land and forest rights. Any intrusion by the Seneca onto the land would be deemed trespassing. Unfortunately, vandalism and destruction of the forest began, and several Senecas were arrested.

The Ebenezer community did not want any further trouble with the Senecas and were sympathetic to their plight as they, too, had been persecuted in Germany. The Seneca Nation convened a meeting with the Ebenezer group to find a joint amicable remedy. The Inspirationists believed that they had been deceived by the land agent over the purchase of the land and what was theirs. Yet, they still considered their position strong as they had legally purchased the land. With some reluctance, the Senecas reached a settlement with the Germans. The Native Americans would relocate to their nearby reservations in southwestern New York at Allegany and Cattaraugus counties. Some would receive compensation for their land claims. It was an agreement that did not please all, but it did end the conflict. By late 1846, the last of the Senecas left the Ebenezer colony and the German settlers came into full possession of the land.[16] Now, the community could prosper and grow without impediments.



The Ebenezer Community

From 1843 to 1846, over 800 Inspirationists arrived at the colony from Germany. This diverse group included young and old, wealthy and poor, skilled and unskilled workers.

The wealthier members were initially called upon to contribute funds and finance various operations. Land would be held in common for two years. This plan was based on conditions in the Old World, where wealth and property acquisition was difficult. This experiment failed at the colony. The economic conditions for attaining wealth and property were readily available in America. Demands for skilled and unskilled laborers in America meant abundant jobs, and a worker and his family fared better in the New World than in Germany.

The challenge for the Community was to maintain a cohesive group that desired to live within the confines of Ebenezer and not be swayed by the “temptations” of the New World. To achieve this, the elders, in January 1846, crafted the Constitution of the Community of True Inspiration at Ebenezer. The document identified this society as a faith based group founded on the Scriptures who “pledged to render obedience to their faith in all respects, to fight for it, to endure and suffer and struggle to preserve in it to the end of life.”[17] All deacons and elders were to live a life of grace with the spiritual and temporal welfare of the community as their primary concern. Community members were to “live likewise” and recognize the deacons and elders as their spiritual teachers and pastors. All authority, both spiritual and administrative, was vested in the elders.

The Ebenezer community exhibited the qualities of a communistic society and was the first such organized assemblage in western New York. Land, livestock, buildings, and machinery were held in common, and each member “was to bear his burden according to his ability for the common good of the community.” Under the terms of their Constitution, all received an annual fixed wage from the treasury, as established by the elders, and the guarantee of medical care, daily food, and shelter.[18] Incidentals such as tools, clothing, shoes, furniture, and bedding were to be purchased separately and considered the individual property of that member.

This lifestyle achieved positive results for the community and the majority thrived under this arrangement. Success and sacrifice, both spiritual and physical, were a shared experience. However, not all enthusiastically embraced it. Wealthier members lost control of their affluence, and poorer community members realized they could achieve a better and freer life outside the Ebenezer community. Many left but the society did not document the numbers of those who moved away.


Life in the Colony

The four residential communities of the Ebenezer colony occupied approximately 8,000 acres, and the members resided in villages instead of scattered farmhouses. This settlement arrangement was due more to the elders' supervision and control over the Inspirationists than would have been possible if they lived in scattered homesteads.[19] The appeal of American self-determination was often regarded as a tacit threat to the communal routine.

The elders assigned families to housing within the colony. There was no standardization of home designs. Some buildings were two stories, but most were one level or a story and a half, and the number of bedrooms varied. Homes were either timber frame or brick construction. The homes did not have a kitchen or dining room, as cooking and eating were communal events. Home furnishings were purchased by each family. Wood for heating the house was supplied by the community. Single men resided in a “brother's house.” This was a large home with individual apartments consisting of a bedroom and sitting room.

The location of a member’s residence was based on their employment. Farmers and agriculture workers were housed on the outskirts of the community. Cabinet makers, harness makers, butchers, craftsmen, and laborers resided adjacent to their work site. Bakers, cooks, and cleaners lived near the communal kitchens. Schoolmasters and some teachers lived above the classroom.[20]

The Inspirationists did not favor large gatherings. Consequently, shared meals were eaten at the kitchen-house. These houses were situated throughout the four communities and of an appropriate size to accommodate the moderate number who gathered for daily sustenance. While the food was simple fare, there was always an abundance. Men, women, and children sat in separate areas, and conversation at the table was discouraged. A prayer service followed each meal.

Education was a priority for the Ebenezer community. The German states in the 19th century had a prestigious tradition of educating boys and girls and ensuring that teachers were highly qualified.[21] This practice followed the Inspirationists to the New World. Boys and girls studied together in the classroom. The school day was long, enabling the parents to work without worrying about their children at home. Classes were conducted six days a week and year-round. The only exceptions were for religious holy days and to help with the harvest.

The Ebenezer community was required to abide by the educational requirements of New York State. However, the colony, as the Incorporated Village of Ebenezer, had full control over the curriculum, allowing religious instruction. Students were taught their catechism, Bible history, and stories about the heroes of the True Inspirationists faith. Additionally, boys and girls were taught practical skills such as knitting, as many made their own socks and small articles of clothing. Older boys learned a trade and worked as apprentices at the colony’s various craft shops. Girls were taught cooking, baking, spinning, and sewing.[22] German was the main language spoken here, but business transactions with the “outside” required a command of English; subsequently, students were taught basic English.

While bachelors lived in segregated housing, single women lived with their parents until married. Marriages had to be approved by the elders. A one-year courtship was required, and then a simple ceremony was performed. Men under the age of 24 were not permitted to marry, but there was no similar prohibition on women. Divorce was not accepted, nor was a second marriage to a widow or widower.


Farming and Commerce

The Inspirationists, while grounded in their faith, were sustained by commerce and agriculture, selling produce and manufactured products to support the community financially. Each of the four Ebenezer communities had a farm division supervised by a farm manager; the colony had 2200 acres under cultivation. Various industries, craft shops, and businesses were operated by the workers. Assorted occupations of the members were listed as farmers, merchants, butchers, shoemakers, copper, millers, tanners, potters, bookbinders, carpenters, dyers, wagon makers, tailors, locksmiths, saw millers, laborers, and other livelihoods.[23]

The New Ebenezer hamlet, the smallest of the four, had no farm. However, it contained 9 houses: a small dry goods store, a carpenter shop, a barn and stable, and a dye house. Its location on Buffalo Creek was an ideal source of water power for the woolen mill. Upper Ebenezer had a church, schoolhouse, general store, meat house, and bakery. Farming was conducted here with assorted barns and stables on the land. Industries employed tinsmiths, blacksmiths, carpenters, cabinet makers, and shoemakers. A grist mill and saw mill utilized the power of the Buffalo Creek surrounded by lumber resources.

Middle Ebenezer was the largest of the villages within the colony. It held the largest population of the colony, with 57 houses, a church, a schoolhouse, and a general store. Multiple businesses functioned here: a sawmill and a wool mill with looms and spinning machines. Skilled and unskilled laborers worked as carpenters, locksmiths, potters, blacksmiths, bakers, wagon makers, furniture manufacturing, boot and shoemakers, a book bindery and print shop, clock and watchmakers, and candle makers. A cider mill and brewery were also located in the village. The farm division managed a large piggery, a dozen barns, stables, drying sheds, and granaries. Slaughterhouses, meat markets, and produce storage sheds were part of the agricultural division.

Lower Ebenezer was the community's spiritual center, as the largest church was located there. Like the other villages, it contained housing and craft shops for the residents. As the colony's population grew, more schools were located here.


Religion

The singular purpose of the Ebenezer community was religion. The daily activities of agriculture, work, and education provided the inhabitants with the necessary means to live apart from “the world” and concentrate on living out their religious beliefs. The community observed four core rites: baptism, confirmation, marriage, and burial, officiated by an elder.

Those beliefs were focused on the Old and New Testaments and the revelations of prophecy. Following that were the 24 rules for living a Godly life.[24] Some of those precepts included obedience to God and the elders, praying, living a humble existence, hard work, and charity to all. Additionally, the community followed the “Twenty-One Rules for the Daily Examination of Our Lives.” This comprised more of a code of conduct for matters unrelated to the faith or religion.[25]

The leadership of the faithful was comprised of the prophets and elders. The prophets were regarded as the head of the church. Usually, this comprised only two to four individuals. At times, accusations were made of false prophets within the community, but there is no written record of who they were, why the allegations were made, and the results of such assertions. However, there was some indication of jealousy at the root of these claims. Next were the elders who held various occupations within the colony. They were viewed as the spiritual fathers of the communities and pastors of each individual church. They conducted religious services and officiated at the ceremonial rites.

The congregation was divided into three spiritual groups or “orders.” Membership was based on levels of piety. The “high order” was the first, then the middle group and the third was the lowest, mostly children. In this third order men and women and boys and girls were segregated. Each order held separate services simultaneously, which excluded the others. A yearly spiritual examination of the members was conducted, usually in late December. During this scrutiny all members of each order were subjected to an intensive examination to determine their spiritual condition and placement into an order. Elders examined elders, and lay members evaluated each other. However, a person could be removed from a group based on their conduct.[26]

The meetinghouse was a plain structure devoid of any signs or symbols of the Christian faith. This white-washed building contained no pulpit or stained glass windows. The interior was divided into three separate rooms for each order. Members entered in silence. The presiding elder sat at a table flanked by a row of elders facing the congregation. Men and women sat across from each other on long benches, each person carrying their Bible.

Religious services were held daily, and attendance was mandatory. Morning services were conducted on Wednesdays, Saturdays, and Sundays, with an afternoon service as well. Prayer services were conducted every evening, and extra services were held on special or holy days of the year. Each service began with a silent prayer followed by a hymn announced by the presiding elder. No musical instruments were to accompany the singing, and the tunes were analogous to traditional Lutheran hymns blended with Georgian chant. The melodies were described as melancholy.[27]

Following the hymn was a long prayer recited by the elders while the congregants knelt on the hardwood floors. After that a passage from the Bible was read with the men and then the women reading each verse. There was no formal sermon, but each elder provided a lesson for the congregation. The intention of the service was for each member to receive a message of inspiration from the Bible or the lessons or directly from God. A concluding prayer and hymn ended the lengthy service with the members silently leaving.


The Move

By the early 1850s external pressures and conditions began encroaching upon the colony. The city of Buffalo was expanding into their area, bringing with it worldly distractions. Newly arrived immigrants from Germany were more attracted to well-paying jobs than developing their spiritual life. These settlers enjoyed comfort, entertainment, money, and individuality rather than a communal religious lifestyle.

Tensions percolated within the Community of True Inspiration. Envy and resentment among members and elders threatened to tear at the core of their faith. Some members were expelled or left voluntarily for better opportunities. Allegations that some community members were becoming wealthy or not abiding by the rules brought charges and counter-charges, creating an unholy environment. 

Water power for the mills along Buffalo Creek and an adjoining canal diminished due to erosion. Farm production was reduced due to flooding. A railroad was proposed that, when completed, would divide Lower Ebenezer from Middle Ebenezer. The local legislative authorities viewed the Community’s property as a prime site for the expansion of industry and agriculture and desired to take more control of the area. It was apparent to the elders that survival of the community, both spiritual and material, necessitated a move.

The Community decided that a larger parcel of land was required to continue their mission. Commanded by “inspiration,” it was decided that this could be acquired somewhere in the western part of the nation. In September 1854, four members: Christian Metz, Carl Winzenried, Ferdinand Weber, son of George Weber, an original settler at Ebenezer, and Charles Mayer left western New York to find the Community’s new “promised land.” The four traveled first to Chicago, then St. Louis, and navigated the Missouri River to Parkville near Kansas City. They journeyed through the Kansas prairie in wagons and on foot with Native American guides, seeking their new home.[28] The four could not locate adequate tracts of land to suit the Community’s needs. Additionally, political tensions were raging in the territory over statehood and slavery, which disturbed the group. As a result, the men returned home.

Later that year, John Beyer and Jacob Wittmer scouted land in the newly recognized state of Iowa. They reported that a favorable site was located twenty miles west of Iowa City near a river. In May 1855, they, along with Frederick Heinemann and Carl Winzenreid, examined the flat land in Iowa and, finding it suitable to the Community’s needs, purchased the tract.

The society generally agreed to the move, but some remained in western New York. The historical record does not list names or reasons why they did not go west. In early July 1855, ten years after the colony was founded, the Community of True Inspiration started moving to their new land along the Iowa River. This new settlement was named Amana, a Biblical reference from the Song of Solomon Chapter 4, Verse 8, meaning “to remain faithful.”[29] The move, by wagon and steamboat, took almost six years to complete. These colonists took all they could, including the wares of their trades and livestock, to start their new lives. The properties were placed on the market and the eight thousand acres of Eben-Ezer eventually sold. With the start of the Civil War, the houses and lands that remained of the community were either abandoned or absorbed into the local governmental districts.

In Iowa, the Amana Society thrived and replicated much of what it started in western New York, establishing several colonies within the community and following the same pattern of life, education, commerce, and religious practice. The Amana Society flourished until the Great Depression of the 1930s. At this juncture, the “Great Change” occurred as the Society split into two distinct organizations. One of which later evolved into the manufacturer of refrigeration units: the Amana Corporation.[30]

Germans fled the Old World to the New World, seeking religious freedom and the self-determination to live as they wished. This vision was first realized in western New York but as the world encroached a move to Iowa was necessitated. The communal lifestyle of the Community of True Inspiration came at a time when the words of Karl Marx started to echo in Europe. While this Society likely would denounce Marx’s ideal of a godless shared community life, the group at Ebenezer was, in reality, one of the first communist groups in America. The difference was that the Ebenezer community’s raison d’être was to glorify God through their lives and work. This success was achieved in western New York.

About the author: Paul Lubienecki obtained his M.A. in Pastoral Ministry from Christ the King Seminary, an M.A. in History from Buffalo State College, and his Ph.D. in History from Case Western Reserve University. His research work examined how Buffalo native Msgr. John Boland established labor schools for workers to assist them in integrating the fundamentals of the social encyclicals in the workplace. Dr. Lubienecki has lectured and published multiple journal articles on Catholic labor schools. He recently published The Americanization of  Lay Catholics on Organized Labor by Mellen Press.

Dr. Lubienecki has taught courses in American history, theology, spirituality and museum studies and is a contributing editor to the Encyclopedia of Cleveland History.  He has been a Special Studies Instructor at the Chautauqua Institution and is the founding director of the Boland Center for the Study of Labor and Religion, where he teaches, publishes, and lectures on the integration of history at the intersection of religion and the labor movement. He is also engaged in union-organizing activities of service workers in the Buffalo area.



Bibliography

[i] Stefan von Senger in Emigration and Settlement Patters of German Communities in North America, (Indianapolis, Indiana University Press, 1995), 148.

[ii] E. Clifford Nelson, The Lutherans in North America, (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1975), 132.

[iii] Charles Nordhoff, The Communistic societies of the United States, (New York: Dover Publications, 1966), 25.

[iv] Thomas Streissguth, Utopian Visionaries,(Minneapolis: The Oliver Press, Inc., 1999), 67.

[v] Frank J. Lankes, The Ebenezer Society, (West Seneca: West Seneca Historical Society, 1963), 9.

[vi] Bertha Shambaugh, Amana: The Community of True Inspiration, (Des Moines: State Historical Society of Iowa, 1988), 329

[vii] Ibid., 57.

[viii] Lankes, 13.

[ix]Alan DuVal. Christian Metz: German-American Religious Leader & Pioneer. Ed. Peter Hoehnle. (Iowa City: Penfield Books, 2005), 21.

[x] Streissguth, 68.

[xi] David Ellis, James Frost, Harry Carman, A History of New York State, (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1967), 307.

[xii]Frederick  Houghton,  The History of the Buffalo Creek Reservation, (Buffalo: Publications of the Buffalo Historical Society. Vol. 24. 1920), 110.

[xiii] Nordhoff, The Communistic societies of the United States, 28.

[xiv] Lankes, 24.

[xv] Lankes, 35.

[xvi] Houghton,  121.

[xvii] Constitution of the Ebenezer Community.  Elisha Blakeman recollections found in “A Brief Account of the Society of Germans Called the True Inspirationists,” (undated) Western Reserve Historical Society, Cleveland, Ohio.

[xviii]Shambaugh,  Amana, The Community of True Inspiration,  45.

[xix] Lankes, 61.

[xx] Lankes, 88.

[xxi] Karl A. Schleunes, "Enlightenment, reform, reaction: the schooling revolution in Prussia." Central European History 12.4 (1979), 322.

[xxii] Lankes, 90.

[xxiii] Lankes, 96.

[xxiv] Lankes, 41.

[xxv] Shambaugh, 277.

[xxvi] Shambaugh, 313.

[xxvii] Lankes, 44.

[xxviii] Lankes, 121.

[xxix] Nordhoff, The Communistic societies of the United State, 31.

[xxx] David Hudson, Marvin  Bergman; Loren Horton, eds., The Biographical Dictionary of Iowa. (Iowa City, IA: University Of Iowa Press, 2009), 169.[1] Stefan von Senger in Emigration and Settlement Patters of German Communities in North America, (Indianapolis, Indiana University Press, 1995), 148.


Thursday, August 1, 2024

New York’s World War II Monuments: A Remembrance

By Michael Mauro DeBonis 

Copyright ©2024 All rights reserved by the author



World War II (1939-1945) was the most bloody, destructive, and costly military and political conflict in the known history of humanity. The war spanned every habitable continent (except deep-frozen Antarctica), northern and southern hemispheres, and it was brutishly fought on land, sea, and air. America’s National WW II Museum’s website says World War II cost the lives of nearly 85 million people in total, including both civilians and military personnel, from across the globe. For the United States of America, WW II began late, in early December of 1941, as opposed to Western Europe, where the man-made catastrophe had started two years earlier, in 1939.


Wall of Military Men who died in WWII Battle of the North Atlantic, Battery Park, NYC. Photo by Michael Mauro DeBonis
World War II Memorial, Battery Park, NYC. Photo
by Michael Mauro DeBonis April 2001.


World War II pitted the Axis Powers of Germany, Japan, and Italy against the Allied Powers of the USA, France, the United Kingdom and its Commonwealth, the Soviet Union, and many others. In America, the WW II historical museums and memorials, which honor our country’s many men and women who contributed to the war effort, are nearly countless in number and exist in every U.S. state and territory. This article focuses on just two of New York State’s numerous ones.

At the southern end of Battery Park, in New York City, is the famed East Coast World War 2 Memorial. We know from nycgovparks.org that the East Coast (WW II) Memorial was designed by the architectural firm of Gehron and Seltzer in the early 1960s, commissioned by the American Battle Monuments Commission (ABMC) shortly before this time, and it was completed by the spring of 1963. NYCGOVPARKS.ORG further comments that this exquisitely built and executed WW II memorial was dedicated to American President John F. Kennedy on May 23, 1963.

The massive Battery Park World War 2 Memorial comprises eight huge, smoothed granite walls, with each wall immortalizing the inscribed names, lives, and heroic sacrifices of 4,601 American military service personnel who died fighting against German naval forces during the very deadly and costly Battle of the North Atlantic, a savage seaborne campaign, which was waged between the Allies and Fascist Germany, throughout the entirety of World War II. It was only in 1943 that the Allies, badly outmatched by the German Navy at first, could gain the upper hand over their enemy.

Wall of American Militarymen who died in WWII
Battle of the North Atlantic, WWII Memorial, Battery
Park, NYC. Photo by Michael Mauro DeBonis.



The East Coast World War II Memorial’s eight monolithic walls accurately record the service branch of each American military member who died fighting in the Battle of the North Atlantic. The names of American military members are not only those of the U. S. Navy and Marine Corps, but they also include the names of many U. S. Army, Coast Guard, and Merchant Marines, who were also killed on American military supply and naval ships, heading back and forth from America’s east coast to Europe, during WW II. Many of the American ships were unfortunately torpedoed and sunk by Germany’s infamous “wolf packs,” which were the deadly and stealthy submarines of the German Navy. German naval submarines were also called U-boats for being constructed and deployed to carry out Nazi Germany’s covert and malicious underwater warfare.

Each of the eight walls of the East Coast WW II Memorial is nineteen feet tall, with four walls each being positioned at the extreme ends of both the northern and southern portions of the Memorial. The walls are situated firmly atop a well-paved plaza. At the eastern side of the Battery Park WW II Memorial, and placed securely on top of a well-cut pedestal of black polished granite, is a giant majestically sculpted bronze (American) bald eagle. The eagle is depicted in a downward swooping motion, carefully depositing an honor wreath on a rising sea wave.

The colossal bronze metallic statue of the eagle was eloquently created and shaped by noted Italian-American sculptor Albino Manca, who died in 1976 and is recorded as such on nycgovparks.org and metmuseum.org for NYC’s Metropolitan Museum of Art. Manca’s great bronze eagle sublimely and solemnly pays tribute to The Battle of North Atlantic’s American fallen. Manca’s eagle is America’s eagle, and the eagle flies directly in the middle of the center aisle, which divides the East Coast World War II Memorial’s eight historic walls.

The other WW II public monument discussed in this article is the Northport (Long Island, NY) Veterans Administration Hospital’s World War II Navy Memorial Plaque. A visual inspection of this WWII public monument (personally carried out by me in September of 2023) indicates that it was cast in bronze, although other composite metals and materials may have been used in its composition. The Northport VA Hospital’s WW II Navy Memorial Plaque is part of an internationally famous series of historical markers called Still on Patrol. The Still on Patrolmarkers are memorial plaques issued by the United States Navy, U. S. Veterans Administration Hospitals, and the U. S. Submarine Veterans of World War II to give the highest esteem and permanence to the lives of American naval officers and sailors who bravely sacrificed their lives, in both Pacific and Atlantic theaters of operation during the Second World War, to advance and preserve democracy. The War Memorial Center of Wisconsin states on its website warmemorialcenter.org that these very respected Still on Patrol historical markers were issued at least as far back as September of 1988. They are intended to enshrine in perpetual honor the lives of 3,131 U. S. Navy submarine sailors and their 374 officers, who guided them in battle against the navies of Imperial Japan and Nazi Germany. The artfully embossed captions in bronze describing the Still on Patrol WW II Memorial Plaques affirm these statements.

They further detail in bold capital English print all the specific names of the 52 sunken submarines of WW II’s U. S. Navy, such as the Albacore, Bonefish, Sealion, Seawolf, S-27, and S-28. At the top left and right-hand corners of the Still on Patrol WW II Memorial Plaque are also elegantly embossed in bronze the official seals and symbols of the U. S. Navy’s Submarine Warfare Insignia and Insignia of the U. S. Submarine Veterans of WW II, respectively. Just above the bottom center of the Still on Patrol Plaque is another gracefully embossed and deeply delineated large image of a U. S. Navy WW II submarine, swiftly splitting ocean waves, as it cruises the open waters of the high seas, looking for America’s maritime enemies.

Directly below the raised large image of the WW II submarine on the Still on Patrol WW II Memorial Plaque are embossed two separate and moving comments regarding the dead and gallant American submariners of WW II, who valiantly served on the U. S. Navy’s sunken underwater war machines, and never again returned alive home, to both family and friend. One comment is movingly proclaimed from the mouth of WW II U. S. Navy Admiral Chester W. Nimitz, and the other stirring tribute is from WW II U. S. Navy Vice-Admiral C. A. Lockwood.



They both read as follows:

1) WE SHALL NEVER FORGET THAT IT WAS OUR SUBMARINES THAT HELD THE LINES AGAINST THE ENEMY WHILE OUR FLEETS REPLACED LOSSES AND REPAIRED WOUNDS.

FLEET ADMIRAL CHESTER W. NIMITZ, UNITED STATES NAVY, 1941-1945.



2) I CAN ASSURE YOU THAT THEY WENT DOWN FIGHTING AND THAT THEIR BROTHERS WHO SURVIVED THEM TOOK A GRIM TOLL ON OUR SAVAGE ENEMY TO AVENGE THEIR DEATHS.

VICE ADMIRAL C. A. LOCKWOOD, JR., COMMANDER, UNITED STATES NAVY SUBMARINE FORCE, 1943-1946.



Teresa Reid, a senior-level historian and curator for the Northport Historical Society, says that the “…Still on Patrol WW 2 Memorial Plaque at the VA Hospital at Northport, Long Island, was installed in 2013 to give the World War II U.S. Navy veterans of Nassau and Suffolk Counties the great admiration and honor due to them because of their bloody and historic sacrifices made for the American nation, at a most critical time of need.”

The Historical Marker Database (HMD. Org) lists the WW II U. S. Navy Still on Patrol Memorial Plaques as being posted at historical sites in as many as 28 different U. S. states. The submariners of World War Two who served and died on the Still on Patrol submarines are listed as “still on patrol” because they never returned home from the Second World War to their families and friends alive and (still to this day) are considered lost at sea. As members of America’s Greatest Generation, they, their lives, and their immortal tributes to defend American democracy will live on forever. 



Although the Still on Patrol WW II Memorial Plaque is not the aesthetic masterpiece, as is Manca’s superlative eagle, it was not intended to be as such. The Still on Patrol WW II Memorial Plaque is a work of adequately conceived and delivered artistic craftsmanship. It is a work of solid and resilient creative competence. In being so, the Still on Patrol WW II Memorial Plaque (situated in Northport, NY) effectively transmits and conveys the American cultural ideals of democracy American WW II veterans doggedly fought to preserve, as does Gehron, Seltzer and Manca’s earlier World War II East Coast Memorial, on display, in NYC. World War II's thematic and historical threads universally connect American war memorials. The Still on Patrol WW II Memorial Plaque (whose designer is currently unknown) should be interpreted philosophically and historically as an extension of the East Coast WW II Memorial. A viewer’s trip to personally see both is not wasted time or effort.



BIBLIOGRAPHY:

1) DeBonis, Michael Mauro, Personal Visit to Manhattan’s East Coast World War II Memorial at Battery Park, NYC, April 2001.

2) DeBonis, Michael Mauro, Personal Visit to the Veterans Administration Hospital at Northport, Long Island, New York, September 19, 2023.

3) Reid, Teresa, Interview with Michael Mauro DeBonis at Northport, New York, October 3, 2023.

4) www.hmdb.org, Official Website of the Historical Marker Database.Org, situated throughout all 50 American states, Online Inquiry by Michael Mauro DeBonis, April 17, 2024.

5) www.metmuseum.org, Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC, Online Inquiry by Michael Mauro DeBonis, April 12, 2024.

6) www.nationalww2museum.org, The National World War Two Museum, New Orleans, Louisiana, Online Inquiry by Michael Mauro DeBonis, March 21, 2024.

7) www.nycgovparks.org, Official Website of the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation, New York City, New York, Online Inquiry by Michael Mauro DeBonis, February 23, 2024.

8) www.warmemorialcenter.org, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Online Inquiry by Michael Mauro DeBonis, March 19, 2024.





About the Author: Michael Mauro DeBonis is a poet and a historian from Long Island, NY. A graduate of Suffolk County Community College (A. A. in Liberal Studies) and SUNY at Stony Brook (B. A. in English Literature), Michael’s work first appeared in The Brookhaven Times Newspapers. Michael’s latest poetry and prose may be found in The Lyric Magazine, The New York Almanack and The New York History Review. Mr. DeBonis is dedicated to studying and to learning the history of the great State of New York.



Epitaph for Sailor X

Epitaph for Sailor X

by Michael Mauro DeBonis
Copyright ©2024 All rights reserved by the author


 

                                    “Give an old ghost

                                    what you love most

 

                                    in the form of a prayer.

 

                                    I was a sailor in the open air.

                                    I was a dream in a burning star.

 

                                    I am one without a care,

                                    sleeping with kelp and songs ajar.”

 


                                  - April 17, 2024.          

 

 



 

About the Author: Michael Mauro DeBonis is a poet and a historian from Long Island, New York.  A graduate of Suffolk County Community College (A. A. in Liberal Studies) and SUNY at Stony Brook (B. A. in English Literature), Michael's work first appeared in The Brookhaven Times Newspapers.  Michael's latest poetry and prose may be found in The Lyric Magazine, The New York Almanack, and The New York History Review.  Mr. DeBonis is dedicated to studying and learning the history of the great State of New York.

                                    

The Writer Behind the Masked Man

by Stephen G. Eoannou
Copyright ©2024. All rights reserved by the author



Ninety years have passed since the radio listeners first asked, “Who was that masked man?” As the 90th anniversary of The Lone Ranger’s radio premiere is celebrated, an even more intriguing question about one of the most iconic and enduring characters to emerge from the early days of radio lingers: who actually created him? Was it a struggling freelancer from Buffalo named Fran Striker? A wealthy Detroit radio station owner? Or did a team of writers create one of our most beloved and enduring heroes?

Part of the conflict over the Ranger’s “parentage” is attributable to his enduring popularity: radio was just the start of his nine-decade gallop through American pop culture. The "Masked Man" conquered all media: television, movies, books, and comics.

Even today, Ranger toys and giveaways remain highly collectible, and franchise reboots occur regularly. Many people were eager to claim the credit—and reap the benefits—from that long-lived success.


Consider the Freelancer

Francis Hamilton Striker, born in Buffalo, New York, on August 19, 1903, to Frank and Addie Striker, is one of the leading contenders for the title of the Ranger’s creator.

By all accounts, Striker had a happy childhood, which he shared with his younger sister, Pauline. He showed a keen interest in reading and writing from an early age. He sold his first article and short story to a Buffalo newspaper when he was only twelve.

But far from being a quiet, bookish child, Striker was gregarious and curious and created a scrapbook of membership cards from all the youth groups, church clubs, and science clubs he belonged to. At Lafayette High School, he ran track, played saxophone in the school band, and became interested in photography and science. After graduation, he attended The University of Buffalo and majored in Chemistry. In addition, he was active in theater and played the sax in various jazz bands. He also pledged multiple fraternities because, as he explained, each frat had such great guys he just couldn’t decide on one. University officials, of course, reprimanded him. 


Striker’s True Vocation 

Striker’s interest in the theater eventually surpassed his interest in Chemistry. Much to his parents’ dismay, Striker dropped out of college. He tried working at Woolworths and Pillsbury, but the theater kept calling him.

He temporarily left Buffalo for New York City and was hired by The Harry Miller Production Company, a producer of live stage shows. There, Striker learned to direct, produce, and write scripts professionally.


Back to Home Base 

Buffalo remained Striker’s true home, and he returned to The Nickel City in 1928, intending to establish himself as a producer and director in Buffalo’s growing theater circle. But Striker always had a curious mind and soon found himself attracted to the exciting new world of radio. His writing and production experience in New York provided the entrée to that world and landed him a position with local station WEBR.

The early days of broadcasting were heady and frantic with live productions, full in-studio orchestras, and station owners desperate to fill airtime. At WEBR, Striker wore many hats—director, announcer, sax player, news reporter, and, of course, scriptwriter. 


Love and Success 

Romance entered Striker’s life when he reconnected with Janet Gisel, someone he had known since childhood. As children, the two didn’t like each other very much. Things were quite different as adults. They dated and were married in April 1929.

The following year, Striker was promoted to WEBR’s Station Manager, providing him with a more sharply defined role that enabled him to focus mainly on writing and directing live radio dramas.

Striker flourished. He could write quickly and innovatively and pound away at his Remington 16 typewriter for hours.

About this time, Striker borrowed an idea from a New York City-based writer, Phillips Lord, and began offering his scripts to content-starved radio stations nationwide. This approach allowed him to sell a radio series several times in different markets. His fees ranged between two and six dollars per script, income that the newly married Striker desperately needed.


Hard Times 

The stock market crash had sent the nation reeling into a Depression that grew deeper as the months passed. In 1932, the unemployment rate in the United States was around twenty-four percent. Twelve million Americans were out of work, and over a quarter of a million families had lost their homes.

The Strikers were not immune to these economic woes. By the time FDR was elected to his first presidential term in November 1932, Striker had supported a dozen family members who had lost everything since Black Monday, in addition to Fran and Janet’s first child born that same year.

Striker was working and writing almost non-stop at WEBR and hawking his scripts across the country. He was under constant financial pressure to provide for his growing number of dependents.


Enter George Trendle 

One of the radio stations that bought scripts from Striker in 1932 was Detroit’s WXYZ, owned by George W. Trendle. Trendle was born in Ohio in 1884 and graduated from law school in 1908. He was very good at both contract law and negotiation.

In addition, Trendle was an astute businessman drawn to the entertainment industry because of its potential profits. Before attending law school, he was an early investor in nickelodeons, the somewhat crude storefront theaters continuously showed short films.

Nickelodeons were the forerunner to the movie theaters and palaces that followed. They were not very reputable, sometimes considered dangerous by local authorities, and were associated with questionable characters. Physically, they were small, smokey, and furnished with uncomfortable wooden chairs.

When longer motion pictures began to be produced, Trendle could see that the nickelodeons’ days were numbered. He was convinced that moviegoers would flock to larger, more comfortable venues to watch lengthier films and would gladly pay more for the luxury.

And so, Trendle, together with a group of financial investors, built the Columbia Theater, the first large movie house in Detroit. It was an instant success.

By 1928, Trendle owned twenty movie theaters. He sold them all for cash just before the 1929 stock market collapse.


The Next Big Opp and the Last Word

Trendle saw radio as the next big opportunity in entertainment investment. He envisioned potential profits from paid advertising and sponsored programming. And so he bought Detroit radio station and Columbia Broadcasting affiliate WGHP and changed the call letters to WXYZ, “The Last Word In Radio.”

Not even Trendle could escape the Depression, however. He saw his other investments wiped out, and his net worth plummeted from three million to two hundred and fifty thousand dollars. 

Always frugal, Trendle pinched every penny in his new radio venture and would eventually become known as “The Miser of Motown.” He kept two sets of books and used the phony one to show employees and potential hires he couldn’t afford to pay much. He often threatened to fire anyone who wouldn’t take a pay cut. Since jobs were scarce, his radio station employees had no choice but to accept lower wages.

Trendle dropped WXYZ’s affiliation with the Columbia Broadcasting System in another cost-cutting move. This meant that WXYZ could no longer access CBS’ nationally syndicated programming. Trendle wanted cheaper productions and relied on local talent and freelancers to supply content. He purchased Striker’s Warner Lester radio series and was impressed with Striker’s storytelling abilities.

By 1932, Striker was supplying Trendle with six half-hour scripts per week. In December of that year, Striker received a letter from the dramatic director of WXYZ asking if he would “… write up three or four wild west thrillers…including all the hokum of the masked rider, rustler, killer Pete, heroine on the train tracks, etc.”


A New Hero Emerges

Striker, now an expert in repurposing and reselling scripts, dug out the tenth episode of a series he wrote called Covered Wagon Days, which had aired two years earlier. He rewrote the episode and introduced a new hero: The Lone Ranger.

As instructed, Striker produced a handful of Lone Ranger scripts. Over three weeks, letters and revisions were exchanged between Striker and the WXYZ creative team regarding these first Ranger episodes. Striker would revise as he saw fit, responding to feedback as any author would.

On January 21, 1933, Striker received another letter from WXYZ, concluding, “I hope the above suggestions won’t cramp your style. I realize they have changed the character you created, but only in a minor way.” This letter, written before the first episode of The Lone Ranger aired, clearly acknowledges that Striker created The Lone Ranger.

The Lone Ranger did not premiere on WXYZ. Instead, the pilot had a special test run on WEBR in Buffalo. Local radio actor John L. Barrett was the first to star as the "Masked Man."

A few days later, The Lone Ranger debuted on WXYZ with George Stenius playing the lead role. The thirty-minute show ran on Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday nights.

The show did well from the start. Striker polished each script, taking special care with The Lone Ranger. He was paid four dollars an episode.

Although The Lone Ranger was moved to the more coveted Monday, Wednesday, and Friday night slot, it failed to attract a national sponsor. Trendle, however, sensed that The Lone Ranger was special and could become a major money-maker. He continued to pursue sponsorship aggressively and finally signed Gordon Bakery as the show’s exclusive sponsor in November 1933.

With Gordon’s backing, Trendle was able to syndicate the show. Throughout the winter, more radio stations tied into WXYZ’s broadcast. By the spring of 1934, The Lone Ranger was a national hit and on its way to becoming a cultural phenomenon. 


A Double-Edged Offer 

Trendle recognized that Striker’s talent and vision for The Lone Ranger drove its success. He was also aware of Striker’s growing responsibilities and financial burden in supporting his extended family.

In May of 1934, Trendle offered Striker a full-time position writing exclusively for WXYZ for a salary representing more money than Striker had ever made. The contract also offered job security that would relieve the pressure he was under at home.

However, there was a stipulation: Striker had to sell all rights to The Lone Ranger to Trendle for ten dollars.

Striker was torn. He needed the salary and reliable income to support his wife and now two children as well as his parents, grandparents, various aunts and uncles, and in-laws who were dependent upon him. 

Striker had never signed away the rights to his work before, and the Masked Man’s potential seemed limitless. The Depression, however, was far from over. Because all the family members counted on him and the real possibility that more might soon need his help, he reluctantly signed the contract and sold the rights to Trendle.

Striker had to relocate to Detroit in 1934 as part of the agreement. The Detroit newspapers announced this in an article identifying Striker as the “…creator and author of The Lone Ranger dramas.”

A New Creed. Later, in 1934, Striker wrote “The Lone Ranger Creed,” a guide for the show’s young listeners on how to lead a virtuous life like their hero. By all accounts from family and friends, the Creed represented Striker’s own values.

One of the Creed’s tenets states, “[That] man should live by the rule of what is best for the greatest number.” Perhaps this is the finest explanation of why Striker sold The Lone Ranger’s rights for such a paltry sum. Yet, it must have been vexing for him to watch Trendle reap profits from all The Lone Ranger broadcasts, movies, comics, and toys.


An Enduring Relationship

If Striker was bitter, he never showed it. He continued to work for Trendle, further developing the Ranger character and creating two more classic series, The Green Hornet and Sergeant Preston of the Yukon.

To Trendle’s credit, he honored their original contract and employed Striker through the Depression, ensuring the well-being of Striker’s extended family.

When the Depression ended, Striker asked Trendle for his first raise since signing their 1934 agreement. "The Miser of Motown" promptly fired him. However, the quality of all of Striker’s shows dropped so dramatically in his absence that Trendle’s sponsors forced him to rehire Striker—with a salary increase. 


New Claims of Creatorship

In the 1940s, Trendle began to allege in interviews and articles that he, not Striker, created the Lone Ranger character. A story also circulated that Striker wasn’t hired to work on the show until after the program had aired.

Trendle continued to make these claims until he died in 1972. Even Trendle’s authorized biography written by Mary E. Bickel proclaims on the front cover that Trendle was “The creator and producer of The Lone Ranger, The Green Hornet, Sergeant Preston of The Yukon… .”

When asked in private who created The Lone Ranger, Striker shrugged and said that people in the radio business knew the truth. When asked in public, he answered that “only God creates.”

Striker never confronted Trendle about the lie. He continued working for him until Trendle sold The Lone Ranger rights in 1954 to the Wrather Corporation for three million dollars, a record sale at the time.


Striker’s Final Years

After the sale, Striker returned to Buffalo and continued to write, focusing more on young adult action novels. He also taught creative writing classes at The University of Buffalo and the YMCA.

Sadly, Striker did not live long enough to write his memoirs and tell his side of The Lone Ranger story: he was killed in a car crash in 1962.


Credit Where It’s Due 

There’s no doubt that Trendle and the WXYZ staff contributed to The Lone Ranger’s development with their suggested revisions. Trendle certainly had the resources and business acumen to take The Ranger to a national audience and market him in an unprecedented manner.

The roots of The Lone Ranger, however, began with Striker’s Covered Wagon Days and continued throughout a career marked by his authorship of seven hundred Lone Ranger radio scripts, eighteen Ranger novels, and a dozen more young-adult books featuring the Masked Man.

While Fran Striker never received the acclaim or riches he deserved in his lifetime, he must have been confident that recognition would eventually come. After all, the Lone Ranger Creed states that “truth alone lives on forever.”


About the author: Stephen G. Eoannou is the author of the novel Yesteryear. Based on the life of Fran Striker, Yesteryear has been awarded the 2021 International Eyelands Award for Best Historical Novel, The Firebird Book Award for Biographical Fiction, Bookshelf’s ‘Must Read’ for 2023, and Shelf Unbound’s Notable Indy Books of 2023.