A Lady's Ranch Life in Montana

Front Cover
Isabelle Randall, Richard L. Saunders
University of Oklahoma Press, 2004 - Biography & Autobiography - 192 pages

"A faithful and unvarnished Record of a Settler’s Life" is how Isabel Randall described her letters when they were first published in 1887. Many foreign travelers published accounts of their visits to the American West, but Randall was one of the few European women to write about the western experience from the inside.

In 1884 Randall and her husband settled on a ranch in Montana hoping to make their fortune in the livestock boom. Randall’s letters home to England describe the practical affairs of daily life, rural social interactions, and the natural world around her. Her letters are cheerful, but they also suggest why the Randalls ultimately failed to achieve financial success.

In this new edition of A Lady’s Ranch Life in Montana, Richard L. Saunders supplements Randall’s letters with notes and an extensive introduction drawn from a wealth of primary sources. He sketches the Randalls’ lives before and after their western adventure, describes the stock industry that drew them to Montana, places Isabel’s letters in the context of English attitudes toward Americans, and discusses her neighbors’ reactions to her criticisms of local society.

 

Contents

A Ladys Ranche Life in Montana
37
My Active Busy Life
145

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About the author (2004)

Isabel F. Randall (1860?1933) lived in Montana between 1884 and 1886, when she returned to England and published her collection of letters on her American experience. Richard L. Saunders was a professor at the University of Tennessee, Martin, where he headed the library's public services department and taught U.S. history. He is the author of Dale Morgan on the Mormons and A Lady's Ranch Life in Montana.

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