Plantation and Frontier Documents: 1649-1863
Author : Ulrich Bonnell Phillips
Publisher :
Page : 396 pages
File Size : 24,68 MB
Release : 1909
Category : Plantation life
ISBN :
Author : Ulrich Bonnell Phillips
Publisher :
Page : 396 pages
File Size : 24,68 MB
Release : 1909
Category : Plantation life
ISBN :
Author : Ulrich B. Phillips
Publisher : Alpha Edition
Page : 366 pages
File Size : 18,23 MB
Release : 2021-03-05
Category : Reference
ISBN : 9789354448690
Plantation And Frontier Documents; 1649-1863 Illustrative Of Industrial History In The Colonial & Ante Bellum South (Volume I), has been considered by academicians and scholars of great significance and value to literature. This forms a part of the knowledge base for future generations. So that the book is never forgotten we have represented this book in a print format as the same form as it was originally first published. Hence any marks or annotations seen are left intentionally to preserve its true nature.
Author : Ulrich Bonnell Phillips
Publisher :
Page : 394 pages
File Size : 15,32 MB
Release : 1909
Category : Plantation life
ISBN :
Author : Michael J. Gagnon
Publisher : LSU Press
Page : 312 pages
File Size : 50,74 MB
Release : 2012-10-12
Category : History
ISBN : 0807145084
Renowned New South booster Henry Grady proposed industrialization as a basis of economic recovery for the former Confederacy. Born in 1850 in Athens, Georgia, to a family involved in the city's thriving manufacturing industries, Grady saw firsthand the potential of industrialization for the region. In Transition to an Industrial South, Michael J. Gagnon explores the creation of an industrial network in the antebellum South by focusing on the creation and expansion of cotton textile manufacture in Athens. By 1835, local entrepreneurs had built three cotton factories in Athens, started a bank, and created the Georgia Railroad. Although known best as a college town, Athens became an industrial center for Georgia in the antebellum period and maintained its stature as a factory hub even after competing cities supplanted it in the late nineteenth century. Georgia, too, remained the foremost industrial state in the South until the 1890s. Gagnon reveals the political nature of procuring manufacturing technology and building cotton mills in the South, and demonstrates the generational maturing of industrial laboring, managerial, and business classes well before the advent of the New South era. He also shows how a southern industrial society grew out of a culture of social and educational reform, economic improvements, and business interests in banking and railroading. Using Athens as a case study, Gagnon suggests that the connected networks of family, business, and financial relations provided a framework for southern industry to profit during the Civil War and served as a principal guide to prosperity in the immediate postbellum years.
Author : 王金虎著
Publisher : BEIJING BOOK CO. INC.
Page : 913 pages
File Size : 20,38 MB
Release : 2021-11-08
Category : History
ISBN :
本书审视了美国奴隶主的兴亡历程。指出:美国奴隶主兴起于英属北美殖民地开拓时期。独立建国时期美国的国父们容留了奴隶制。建国后奴隶制在北部逐渐消失,成为南部地区性制度。为了维护奴隶制,内战前经济上处于顺境的南部奴隶主进行了坚持不懈的意识形态和政治争斗,他们在林肯当选总统后领导蓄奴州做出了脱离联邦的抉择。南部的分裂联邦行径引发了内战,而战争的进行恰恰导致了奴隶制的毁灭和南部奴隶主的灭亡。
Author : John Caldwell Guilds
Publisher : University of Georgia Press
Page : 296 pages
File Size : 46,49 MB
Release : 1997
Category : Poetry
ISBN : 9780820318875
William Gilmore Simms (1807-1870), the antebellum South's foremost author and cultural critic, was the first advocate of regionalism in the creation of national literature. This collection of essays emphasizes his portrayal of America's westward migration.
Author : T. H. Breen
Publisher : Princeton University Press
Page : 247 pages
File Size : 42,1 MB
Release : 2009-12-13
Category : History
ISBN : 1400820146
The great Tidewater planters of mid-eighteenth-century Virginia were fathers of the American Revolution. Perhaps first and foremost, they were also anxious tobacco farmers, harried by a demanding planting cycle, trans-Atlantic shipping risks, and their uneasy relations with English agents. George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and their contemporaries lived in a world that was dominated by questions of debt from across an ocean but also one that stressed personal autonomy. T. H. Breen's study of this tobacco culture focuses on how elite planters gave meaning to existence. He examines the value-laden relationships--found in both the fields and marketplaces--that led from tobacco to politics, from agrarian experience to political protest, and finally to a break with the political and economic system that they believed threatened both personal independence and honor.
Author : William L. Barney
Publisher : Oxford University Press
Page : 393 pages
File Size : 49,34 MB
Release : 2020-05-01
Category : History
ISBN : 0190076097
Regardless of whether they owned slaves, Southern whites lived in a world defined by slavery. As shown by their blaming British and Northern slave traders for saddling them with slavery, most were uncomfortable with the institution. While many wanted it ended, most were content to leave that up to God. All that changed with the election of Abraham Lincoln. Rebels in the Making is a narrative-driven history of how and why secession occurred. In this work, senior Civil War historian William L. Barney narrates the explosion of the sectional conflict into secession and civil war. Carefully examining the events in all fifteen slave states and distinguishing the political circumstances in each, he argues that this was not a mass democratic movement but one led from above. The work begins with the deepening strains within Southern society as the slave economy matured in the mid-nineteenth century and Southern ideologues struggled to convert whites to the orthodoxy of slavery as a positive good. It then focuses on the years of 1860-1861 when the sectional conflict led to the break-up of the Union. As foreshadowed by the fracturing of the Democratic Party over the issue of federal protection for slavery in the territories, the election of 1860 set the stage for secession. Exploiting fears of slave insurrections, anxieties over crops ravaged by a long drought, and the perceived moral degradation of submitting to the rule of an antislavery Republican, secessionists launched a movement in South Carolina that spread across the South in a frenzied atmosphere described as the great excitement. After examining why Congress was unable to reach a compromise on the core issue of slavery's expansion, the study shows why secession swept over the Lower South in January of 1861 but stalled in the Upper South. The driving impetus for secession is shown to have come from the middling ranks of the slaveholders who saw their aspirations of planter status blocked and denigrated by the Republicans. A separate chapter on the formation of the Confederate government in February of 1861 reveals how moderates and former conservatives pushed aside the original secessionists to assume positions of leadership. The final chapter centers on the crisis over Fort Sumter, the resolution of which by Lincoln precipitated a second wave of secession in the Upper South. Rebels in the Making shows that secession was not a unified movement, but has its own proponents and patterns in each of the slave states. It draws together the voices of planters, non-slaveholders, women, the enslaved, journalists, and politicians. This is the definitive study of the seminal moment in Southern history that culminated in the Civil War.
Author : John B. Boles
Publisher : University Press of Kentucky
Page : 357 pages
File Size : 25,6 MB
Release : 2021-03-17
Category : History
ISBN : 0813160316
Much that is commonly accepted about slavery and religion in the Old South is challenged in this significant book. The eight essays included here show that throughout the antebellum period, southern whites and blacks worshipped together, heard the same sermons, took communion and were baptized together, were subject to the same church discipline, and were buried in the same cemeteries. What was the black perception of white-controlled religious ceremonies? How did whites reconcile their faith with their racism? Why did freedmen, as soon as possible after the Civil War, withdraw from the biracial churches and establish black denominations? This book is essential reading for historians of religion, the South, and the Afro-American experience.
Author : Jeffrey Robert Young
Publisher : UNC Press Books
Page : 351 pages
File Size : 47,32 MB
Release : 2005-10-12
Category : History
ISBN : 0807876186
In this carefully crafted work, Jeffrey Young illuminates southern slaveholders' strange and tragic path toward a defiantly sectional mentality. Drawing on a wealth of archival evidence and integrating political, religious, economic, and literary sources, he chronicles the growth of a slaveowning culture that cast the southern planter in the role of benevolent Christian steward--even as slaveholders were brutally exploiting their slaves for maximum fiscal gain. Domesticating Slavery offers a surprising answer to the long-standing question about slaveholders' relationship with the proliferating capitalistic markets of early-nineteenth-century America. Whereas previous scholars have depicted southern planters either as efficient businessmen who embraced market economics or as paternalists whose ideals placed them at odds with the industrializing capitalist society in the North, Young instead demonstrates how capitalism and paternalism acted together in unexpected ways to shape slaveholders' identity as a ruling elite. Beginning with slaveowners' responses to British imperialism in the colonial period and ending with the sectional crises of the 1830s, he traces the rise of a self-consciously southern master class in the Deep South and the attendant growth of political tensions that would eventually shatter the union.