Edward Watts is professor emeritus of English at Michigan State University. He is the author or editor of many other books in American studies, most recently Colonizing the Past: Mythmaking and Pre-Columbian Whites in Nineteenth-Century American Writing.
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Description
Acknowledgments Introduction: Cannel Coal Oil and the Creole Cosmopolitan Editorial Note Chapter 1. At Newark, Ohio Chapter 2. From Newark to Kanawha Chapter 3. Up the Elk River to the Landing Chapter 4. Day of Rest at the Landing Chapter 5. Mismanagement at the Oil Works Chapter 6. Radical Improvements Chapter 7. Husband, Wife, and Children Together Again Chapter 8. Loyalty Tested Appendix A. "Made Union Flag: A Story of the Civil War" Appendix B. "A Flag That Saved a County to the Union" Appendix C. Obituary of Sarah Landis Maher Bibliography
"Cannel Coal Oil Days represents an artifact of great interest to scholars working in environmental and energy humanities spaces. Particularly notable is the author's concern with the changing energy landscape in the mid-nineteenth-century US, and the impacts of coal mining and oil distillation processes on worker conditions, public health, and the environment. The book also offers a unique snapshot of the racialized dimensions of extractive industries in antebellum Appalachia. Americanists reading Maher's novel will undoubtedly place it within a broader corpus of mining literature, energy history, and representations of environmental injustice in Appalachia." Matthew S. Henry, University of Wyoming

