This is the story of the several generations that once lived on a few acres of rolling hills and wetlands in a corner of southern Wisconsin.The farm has belonged to Richard Quinney's family for generations, since it was first settled by his great-grandparents fleeing the potato famine in Ireland, and it is the place of his birth and early years. When the old house was torn down more than half a century ago, the family photograph albums were carried up to the farmhouse. A few letters, some diary entries, and a scrapbook of obituaries survived to preserve a portion of family history. Quinney's memoir also draws from the photographs of his mother's family, from the photographs made by his mother and father as they documented their young lives, and from the many photographs of the early years of the family. ""Of Time and Place"" concludes with a photographic survey of the artifacts that remain on the farm.