50 pages • 1 hour read
David McCulloughA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Chapter Summaries & Analyses
As the winter of 1788-1789 approached, provisions began to dwindle. Dean Tyler, who had offered housing to Ichabod Nye, purchased a flat boat and traveled to Pittsburgh for flour. However, the river froze and he was stuck there. Nye and those in Marietta were without bread. The settlers survived without flour and game in the woods until traffic on the river resumed. That spring brought not only food supplies but more people, including skilled laborers and women. A blacksmith provided essential services, fixing broken tools, traps, and looms.
Women, about whom less is written, performed multiple tasks, such as cooking, baking, cleaning, gardening, milking cows, churning butter, and making candles and soap. Lucy Backus Woodridge, who wrote letters home, did not complain of the burden. McCullough notes that everyone, including children, worked hard to survive, sowing and harvesting crops and clearing land. Nye, who was not well- suited to pioneer life, started patching shoes and would ultimately create Marietta’s first tannery.
Although the spring and summer of 1789 produced a bumper crop, two events that summer caused concern. A surveying party, led by John Matthews, on the lower part of the Ohio Company’s purchase lost two packhorses, carrying their provisions, and then another horse.
By David McCullough
1776
David McCullough
Brave Companions
David McCullough
John Adams
David McCullough
Mornings on Horseback
David McCullough
The Great Bridge
David McCullough
The Greater Journey: Americans in Paris
David McCullough
The Johnstown Flood
David McCullough
The Path Between the Seas
David McCullough
The Wright Brothers
David McCullough
Truman
David McCullough