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    • English-American transcendentalist, abolitionist, and early voluntaryist

      • Charles Lane (31 March 1800 – 5 January 1870) was an English-American transcendentalist, abolitionist, and early voluntaryist. Along with Amos Bronson Alcott, he was one of the main founders of Fruitlands and a vegan.
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  1. Charles Lane (31 March 1800 – 5 January 1870) was an English-American transcendentalist, abolitionist, and early voluntaryist. Along with Amos Bronson Alcott, he was one of the main founders of Fruitlands and a vegan.

  2. Charles Lane was a political activist, abolitionist, Transcendentalist, and contributor to The Dial. In 1842, Lane met Bronson Alcott when he had ventured to England in search of people for his communal living experiment.

  3. Fruitlands was a utopian agrarian commune established in Harvard, Massachusetts, by Amos Bronson Alcott and Charles Lane in the 1840s, based on transcendentalist principles. An account of its less-than-successful activities can be found in Transcendental Wild Oats by Alcott's daughter Louisa May Alcott .

  4. In England Charles Lane taught him some utopian notions. Alcott returned to America with three companions including Lane who made up a crowded household in Concord. Vowing to live simply off the land, Alcott started the utopian community, Fruitlands in Harvard, Massachusetts, but it foundered after less than six months in 1843.

    • Emily Mace
  5. Aug 12, 1973 · Here in 1843‐44 Bronson Alcott and Charles Lane conducted an experiment in communal living that rivaled the more famous Brook Farm and which was envisioned as the purest application of New...

  6. Transcendental manuscript materials were first acquired by Clara Endicott Sears beginning in 1914 for her Fruitlands Museum in Harvard, Massachusetts. Sears became interested in the Transcendentalists after acquiring land in Harvard and restoring the Fruitlands Farmhouse.

  7. Lane left to join the nearby Shaker community, while Alcott suffered a nervous collapse. In 1846, Lane returned to England. Louisa May Alcott’s fictional account of Fruitlands is in her story “Transcendental Wild Oats” (1873).

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