This elegantly organized and lucidly written history of a Massachusetts town before 1680 demonstrates that the genre of 'microhistory,' or traditional 'community studies,' remains vibrant." - Choice"Deeply learned and artistically accomplished. In this study, the people of Watertown emerge as individuals, the geography is vivid, the sense of place is strong on both sides of the Atlantic, and the coverage of topics is impressive. Divided We Stand is the leading candidate in my own mind as the best 17th-century New England town study." - Barry Levy, author of Quakers and the American Family: British Quakers in the Delaware Valley, 1650–1765