Ramsey Library

Rebecca Harding Davis
1831-1910

Born in Pennsylvania Rebecca Harding Davis grew up in the mill town of Big Spring, Alabama where her observations of the changes brought about by industrialization had a life-long influence on the themes of her writing. She saw the conditions of women, particularly working women, as a "...tragedy more real  ... than any other in life."


Illustration for "By-paths in the Mountains," by Davis

     In her many articles for Atlantic Monthly, for Appletons, Harper's New Monthly Magazine, The Century, Lippencott's and Scribner's, and other journals and magazines, she sought to expose inequities through the real and the commonplace. Her fiction often characterized as radical by her readers, moved from addressing the abuse of workers by industrial capitalists, to prostitution, to slavery. In her desire to expose life's inequities she pulled from incidences of  "accurate history" ... closely observed human interactions and non-glorified depictions of daily life sometimes startling in their brutal opinion. She was not necessarily a sympathetic observer. She frequently pointed out life and geography that was "peculiar" and exotic to her and by doing so, distanced herself from the experience and revealed her romantic heritage. 

     She often traveled to western North Carolina and her serialized article about the region, "By-Paths in the Mountains," for Atlantic Monthly, vol. 61, iss. 363-364, weaves travelogue literature with careful observations of human character. One of her characters sums up the typical picturesque travel article that was the fashion of the day: "The history of all summering places is alike. An adventurous artist usually ventures into a new field and whispers his discovery to his friends. Scenery is well-nigh as popular a hobby just now as household decoration. ..."  Many women authors between 1850 and the 1890's wrote articles similar to Davis'.  They were intended to appeal to the average reader and therefore,  often reflected common cultural values held at the time. The work of these authors is sometimes referred to as "local color" literature, a kind of bridge between the romanticism of the earlier century with the growing realism of the later century. Harding fits this hybrid model well. Her article, "Life in the iron mills : and other stories," published in Atlantic Monthly in 1861 is her classic study of industrialization.

BIBLIOGRAPHY:  Vertical Files, Gen. Collect., UNCA Ramsey Library

For a comprehensive bibliography:  http://www.lehigh.edu/~dek7/SSAWW/writDavisBiblio.htm

To read further see excerpts included in "Making of America."
Reid, 
"The Land of the Sky;" or, Adventures in Mountain By-Ways, Chapter I
Reid,  "The Land of the Sky;" or, Adventures in Mountain By-Ways, Chapter II
Reid,  "The Land of the Sky;" or, Adventures in Mountain By-Ways, Chapter III
Reid,  "The Land of the Sky;" or, Adventures in Mountain By-Ways, Chapter IV
Reid "The Land of the Sky;" or, Adventures in Mountain By-Ways, Chapter V
Reid,  "The Land of the Sky;" or, Adventures in Mountain By-Ways, Chapter VI
Reid,  "The Land of the Sky;" or, Adventures in Mountain By-Ways, Chapter VII
Reid,  "The Land of the Sky;" or, Adventures in Mountain By-Ways, ChapterVIII
Reid,  "The Land of the Sky;" or, Adventures in Mountain By-Ways, Chapter IX
Reid,  "The Land of the Sky;" or, Adventures in Mountain By-Ways, Chapter X
Reid,  "The Land of the Sky;" or, Adventures in Mountain By-Ways, Chapter XI
Reid,  The Land of the Sky, or Adventures in Mountain By-Ways, Chapter XII
Reid,  The Land of the Sky, or Adventures in Mountain By-Ways, Chapter XIII
Reid, 
The Land in the Sky, or Adventures in Mountain By-Ways, Chapter XIV
Reid,  The Land of the Sky, or Adventures in Mountain By-Ways, Chapter XV
Reid,  The Land of the Sky, or Adventures in Mountain By-Ways, Chapter XVI
Reid,  The Land of the Sky, or Adventures in Mountain By-Ways, Chapter XVII
Reid,  The Land in the Sky, or Adventures in Mountain By-Ways, Chapter XVIII

Reid, "The Mountain Region of North Carolina, " Appletons Journal: a magazine of general literature, Volume 2, Issue 13, March 1877.