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Bouck White
Bouck White (October 20, 1874〔Ancestry.com. U.S. Passport Applications, 1795-1925 (on-line ). Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 2007.〕 – January 7, 1951〔"Bouck White Dies at 76; 'Hermit of the Helderbergs'." The Enterprise, Altamont, N. Y. January 12, 1951. Web. May 31, 2009 ()〕), born Charles Browning White, was a Congregational minister, an American socialist, a Jesusist, an author, a potter, and a recluse. ==Early years== Bouck White was born at Middleburgh, Schoharie County, New York, the son of Charles Addison and Mary (Bouck) White.〔Hayes, John Joseph. "Secretary's Fifth Report By Harvard College (1780- )." Plimpton Press, 1916 ()〕〔Year: 1880; Census Place: Middleburgh, Schoharie, New York; Roll: T9_931; Family History Film: 1254931; Page: 213.1000; Enumeration District: 189; Image: 0200.〕 White used Middleburgh as background in his book ''The Mixing'' (1913) and described the thinly-veiled residents as, "degenerative Dutchmen."〔White, Bouck "The Mixing: What the Hillport Neighbors Did." Garden City: Doubleday, Page & Company, 1913 ()〕 Middleburgh residents sued and retorted that White was "a male child born some years ago in the village, whose early stupidity gave no indication of his future precocity."〔"MIDDLEBURG WANTS NOVEL SUPPRESSED; Villagers Say the Rev. Bouck White Libeled Them in 'The Mixing.'." New York Times Archive, January 23, 1914. Web. May 30, 2009 ()〕
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