Bolton Hall (August 5, 1854 – December 10, 1938) was an American lawyer, author, and Georgism activist who worked on behalf of the poor and started the back-to-the-land movement in the United States at the beginning of the 20th century.[1]
Early life and education
Hall was born in Ireland on August 5, 1854, the son of the Rev. John Hall, who later became pastor of the Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church in New York City. Because he was a teenager when the family came to the United States in 1868, he continued to speak English with an Irish accent.[2] In 1875, he was graduated from Princeton University (where he rowed crew).[2] He received his law degree from Columbia Law School in 1881.
It was reported after the death of the elder Hall in 1898 that the minister had disinherited Bolton "because of the latter's friendly attitude to labor and his friendship for Henry George and his belief in the single tax." Bolton Hall denied the report.[3][a]
Career
Hall was a prolific writer of books and pamphlets.
Around 1886, Hall was a member of the export firm of McCarty and Hall, which failed that year. He filed for bankruptcy but withdrew the action after settling with creditors.[3]
Activism
Hall was active on behalf of various progressive movements. He was an admirer of Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, French politician, philosopher and socialist, of Benjamin R. Tucker, editor and publisher of the individualist anarchist periodical Liberty, and Leo Tolstoy, the Russian novelist, pacifist and Christian anarchist.[5] He was opposed to Marxism and agreed with classical liberal political theorist Herbert Spencer, who called it "the coming slavery."[2]
Before 1908 he established the Vacant Lot Gardening Association in New York City, which grew to "about 200 members" who "conducted a number of experiments in and near New York during its existence." One of them included the use of 30 acres of land on Bronxdale Avenue, near White Plains Road, "which the Astor estate had allowed us to use and on which a number of families had been living." Afterward, the association used property on Dyckman Street near Prescott Avenue, not for cultivation, but for the establishment of a tent city. The difficulty in getting free land for "vacant lot gardening" led Hall to establish the Little Land League, whose idea was to buy property no more than 90 minutes from New York for a training school, "and the people who have proved capable there we shall put on their feet as farmers on a larger piece of land further away." In 1909 he made a trip to Europe to study vacant-lot gardening.[7]
In 1910 he deeded some 68 acres (280,000 m2) of land to establish the egalitarian community of Free Acres in Berkeley Heights, New Jersey, under which the residents pay only a single tax on land values to the community, which, in turn, pays a lump sum to the city. Improvements such as buildings were not to be taxed, but only the value of the land.[8][9]
On June 5, 1916, he was arrested along with Ida Rauh on a misdemeanor charge of distributing pamphlets on birth control at a public meeting in Manhattan's Union Square on May 20 of that year.[10]
He was a disciple of Henry George and one of the leading exponents of the single-tax theory. He was opposed to Tammany Hall, the organization that dominated the political life of the city in the early 20th century. He founded the New York Tax Reform Association.[1]
Personal life and demise
He and Susie Hurlbut Scott were married in 1884[11] and they had a son, John Hoyt Hall, who died at 14 in 1911,[12] and one daughter, Lois, who later married Gerard P. Herrick.[1]
He died on December 10, 1938, at the age of 84 while visiting Thomasville, Georgia, on the advice of his physician.[1]
The Living Bible: The Whole Bible in Its Fewest Words (1928)
Notes
^Published details of John Hall's will state that (upon the death of his wife) his children were to receive equal shares of the estate apart from Bolton who was only to receive the interest from his share.[4]
^ abcdeLeubuscher, Frederic Cyrus (n.d.). "Bolton Hall". The Freeman. republished online by The School for Cooperative Individualism. Archived from the original on December 14, 2010.
^Gould, Rebecca Kneale (2006). At Home In Nature: Modern Homesteading and Spiritual Practice in America. University of California Press. pp. 173–76. ISBN0-520-24142-8.