John Fraser Hart's study of the ever-changing rural landscape is a competent and richly illustrated account of human endeavour, charting patterns of land use across time and space, from the small cross-ploughed fields of Neolithic Britain to the vast wheat-producing plains of modern-day America. It reveals how history is continuously incorporated into the landscape. Times Literary Supplement Hart has a keen eye, a facile pen, and a love for conversation with people who live and work in such places. The result is an admirable and wide-ranging book. Agricultural History A wonderful record to have between two covers... well produced with photographs of exceptional clarity. The Times Higher Education Supplement
Preface and Acknowledgments
Chapter 1. Understanding Landscapes
Part I: Rocks
Chapter 2. The Surface of the Land
Chapter 3. Landscapes of Mining
Part II: Plants
Chapter 4. Plant Life
Chapter 5. The Use of Forests
Chapter 6. Cropping Systems
Part III: Land Division
Chapter 7. Land Division in Britain
Chapter 8. Land Division in America
Part IV: Farm Structures
Chapter 9. Fences and Fields
Chapter 10. Barns
Chapter 11. Other Farm Structures
Chapter 12. Farm Size and Farm Tenure
Part IV: Small Towns and the Urban Edge
Chapter 13. Small Towns
Chapter 14. The Long Shadow of the City
Chapter 15. Recreation
Epilogue: The Changing Countryside
Further Reading
Index
—John C. Hudson, Northwestern University