Provincial Lives, first published in 1999, tells the story of the development of a regional middle class in the antebellum Middle West.Provincial Lives tells the story of the development of a regional middle class in the antebellum Middle West. It traces the efforts of waves of Americans to transmit their social structures, behavior, and values to the West and construct a distinctive regional middle-class culture on the urban frontier. Intertwining local, regional, and national history with social, immigration, gender and urban history, Mahoney examines how a succession of settlers from good society farmers, entrepreneurs, professionals, and genteel men and women from the urban East interacted with, accommodated, and compromised with those already there to construct a middle-class society.Provincial Lives tells the story of the development of a regional middle class in the antebellum Middle West. It traces the efforts of waves of Americans to transmit their social structures, behavior, and values to the West and construct a distinctive regional middle-class culture on the urban frontier. Intertwining local, regional, and national history with social, immigration, gender and urban history, Mahoney examines how a succession of settlers from good society farmers, entrepreneurs, professionals, and genteel men and women from the urban East interacted with, accommodated, and compromised with those already there to construct a middle-class society.Provincial Lives tells the story of the development of a regional middle class in the antebellum Middle West. It traces the efforts of waves of Americans to transmit their social structures, behavior, and values to the West and construct a distinctive regional middle-class culture on the urban frontier. Intertwining local, regional, and national history with social, immigration, gender and urban history, Mahoney examines how a succession of settlers from good society--farmers, entrepreneurs, professionals, and genteel l£¶