TY - JOUR AU - Le Beau, Bryan AB - 1378 The Journal of American History March 1997 contribution to our understanding ofcrime and Fortunately, Wacker's text is supplemented by numerous charts, tables, and maps that amplify punishment in the early republic. Equally im­ portant, it reveals that the trajectory of punish­ his findings and capture trends in agricultural ment wasin reality the passage ofliberal thought production and household management. from quasi obscurity to cultural dominance. Paul G. E. Clemens contributed two grace­ ful essays that flesh out aspects of Wacker's ar­ Ronald Schultz gument and that set the New Jersey experience University 0/ Wyoming in the context of recent historical scholarship. Laramie, Wyoming In his first essay, Clemens contrasts the market orientation of eighteenth-century Jersey farm families with that of a nineteenth-century man­ Land Use in Early New jersey: A Hissorical ufacturing community, emphasizing how mod­ Geography. By Peter O. Wacker and Paul G. est and uneven the former was in comparison with the latter. Drawing on three extended di­ E. Clemens. (Newark: New Jersey Historical Society, 1995. xvi, 321 pp. Paper, $18.95, ISBN aries, he portrays a world where the market was 0-911020-30-6.) relevant but "what was routine and traditional mattered as much as what was unpredictable TI - No King, No Popery: Anti-Catholicism in Revolutionary New England. By Francis D. Cogliano. (Westport: Greenwood, 1995. xvi, 173 pp. $52.95, ISBN 0-313-29729-0.) JO - The Journal of American History DO - 10.2307/2952927 DA - 1997-03-01 UR - https://www.deepdyve.com/lp/oxford-university-press/no-king-no-popery-anti-catholicism-in-revolutionary-new-england-by-9U4GZi5ff3 SP - 1378 EP - 1379 VL - 83 IS - 4 DP - DeepDyve ER -