The following items
may be ordered
from our Museum Shop:

Scene from "The Gores of Massachusetts."
The Gores of Massachusetts
A Film By Robert Tarutis
starring Robert Murphy and Micheal Henderson.
Running time: 37 minutes.
America was young when Christopher Gore and his
wife Rebecca moved into their country estate in
Waltham in 1806. Our nation's views on social
heirarchy and democracy were still forming. Prominent
Bostonians such as Gore - Federalist, governor,
mentor to Daniel Webster - fashioned themselves
as natural aristocrats in the new American social
order.
In The Gores of Massachusetts, you'll meet the
Gores and enter the social world between the revolution
and the Civil War. You'll also meet Robert Roberts,
Gore's African-American butler. Roberts, like
Gore, was trying to discover his identity in the
new nation. A leader in Boston's black community,
Roberts authored one of the earliest books on
domestic service, The House Servant's Directory.
Combining the techniques of historical documentary
and dramatization, this film uses Gore Place as
a window on early 19th-century Massachusetts.
The film explores Federalism, agricultural improvement,
early industrialization, genteel refinement, the
role of servants, and Boston's free black community.
Produced by award-winning filmmaker Robert Tarutis,
the film stars Robert Murphy and Micheal Henderson.
VHS - time: 37 min.
$19.95, plus $4.00 shipping & handling.
Add 5% state sales tax if shipping within Massachusetts.

The House Servant's Directory
A Monitor for Private Families
by Robert Roberts
with an Introduction
by Graham Russell Hodges
"In order to get through your work in proper time,
you should make it your chief study to rise early
in the morning; for an hour before the family
rises is worth more to you than two after they
are up."
Thus begins Robert Roberts' The House Servant's
Directory, first published in 1827 and the standard
for household management for decades afterward.
It is remarkable for several reasons: It is one
of the first books written by an African American
and issued by a commercial press, and it was written
while Roberts (ca. 1780-1860) was in the employ
of Christopher Gore (1758-1827), a U.S. senator
and governor of Massachusetts. Roberts worked
for Gore at Gore's country estate, Gore Place,
from 1825 to 1827.
As portrayed in Graham Hodges' introduction, Roberts'
own story is a unique window into the work habits
and thoughts of America's domestic workers and
into antebellum African American politics. Of
particular note is Roberts' contribution to the
emergence of new self-perceptions of black manliness.
Written at a time when male Americans in general
were reconsidering the construction of masculinity,
Roberts' advice to his fellow servants fostered
black dignity for work that few felt merited respect,
and his counsel to employers on proper treatment
of their servants insisted on their humanity and
respect for their skills.
This edition is a completely new resetting of
the 1827 edition that brings Roberts' original
sage recommendations to a contemporary audience,
demonstrating that, in spite of the passage of
170 years, good advice never goes out of style.
GRAHAM RUSSELL HODGES is a Professor of Early American
history at Colgate University. Among his many
books are The Black Loyalist Directory: African
Americans in Exile After the American Revolution
(1995); Slavery and Freedom in the rural North:
African Americans in Monmouth County, New Jersey,
1665-1870 (1997); an edition of Henri Gregoire's
An Enquiry Concerning the Intellectual and Moral
Faculties, and Literature of Negroes (M.E. Sharpe,
1997); and Slavery, Freedom, and Culture Among
Early American Workers (M.E. Sharpe, 1998).
The House
Servant's Directory
by Robert Roberts
$39.95 hardcover, $18.95 softcover
plus $4.00 shipping & handling.
Add 5% state sales tax if shipping within Massachusetts.
Christopher Gore: Federalist of Massachusetts
1758-1827
by Helen R. Pinckney
Biography. $12.95, plus $4.00 shipping & handling.
Add 5% state sales tax if shipping within Massachusetts.
order
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GORE
PLACE
52
Gore Street
Waltham Massachusetts 02453-6866
voice: (781) 894-2798 fax: (781) 894-5745
E-mail: goreplace@goreplace.org
copyright 1999-2004 Gore Place Society
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