"Thou hast been a generous giver," wrote Henry Wadsworth Longfellow in "To the River Charles," a poetic celebration of the eastern Massachusetts watercourse. Rich in intriguing and amusing anecdotes, this illustrated history traces the Charles's path to the sea through rocky gorges and vast meadows, along with the river's contributions to America's cultural development. Profiles of those who dwelt along the banks range from colonial settlers in the Boston, Charlestown, and Cambridge areas to more recent residents — Captain John Smith, Governor Winthrop, and John Harvard as well as Longfellow, Robert Lowell, and many others. Arthur Bernon Tourtellot recounts the Charles's role in national affairs, including the protective advantages the river offered to colonists during the Revolutionary War. He chronicles the riverside industrial boom of the 1800s, the twentieth-century decline, and the valley's reversion to provincialism. His highly readable narrative also explores the river's influence on the painters, poets, and philosophers of New England's golden age.
I was doubtful that I would garner anything of value from this book, written in the early 1940’s and about many subjects romanticized in our colonial history. It was devoid of racism and classism and didn’t bring up eugenics. With that in mind it could pass for contemporary lit. I’ve been interested in rivers and particularly The Charles, for a couple of years and subconsciously have been picking reads that are river-centric. This river mixes with my family history, although I’ve only seen it once. And there were a few pertinent passages that reminded me of historical events in my family’s history. It’s a fascinating river with an even more fascinating modern history.