Report on the Commencement and Progress of the Agricultural Survey of South-Carolina, for 1843


Book Description

This series consists of a report to the General Assembly by Edmund Ruffin, Agricultural Surveyor of the state, on the commencement and progress of his agricultural survey of South Carolina. Information includes the character, position, and extent of marl in the regions of the state; type and extent of shell deposits; action of calcareous manures along with practical application and effects; a report on the primitive limestone bed; inland and river swamp lands and drainage; remarks on the granitic region; the rice culture of Georgetown District; and an appendix collecting papers referred in, or connected with, the report.







Professional Paper


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Journal of the Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society


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Vols. 20- include Proceedings of the North Carolina academy of science, 1902-







Origins of Southern Radicalism


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In the sixty years before the American Civil War, the South Carolina Upcountry evolved from an isolated subsistence region that served as a stronghold of Jeffersonian Republicanism into a mature cotton-producing region with a burgeoning commercial sector that served as a hotbed of Southern radicalism. This groundbreaking study examines this startling evolution, tracing the growth, logic, and strategy of pro-slavery radicalism and the circumstances and values of white society and politics to analyze why the white majority of the Old South ultimately supported the secession movement that led to bloody civil war.




Larding the Lean Earth


Book Description

A Major History of Early Americans' Ideas about Conservation Fifty years after the Revolution, American farmers faced a crisis: the failing soils of the Atlantic states threatened the agricultural prosperity upon which the republic was founded. Larding the Lean Earth explores the tempestuous debates that erupted between "improvers," intent on sustaining the soil of existing farms, and "emigrants," who thought it wiser and more "American" to move westward as the soil gave out. Larding the Lean Earth is a signal work of environmental history and an original contribution to the study of antebellum America.




South Carolina Naturalists


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"This collection of Civil War-era letters includes epistles from the family of Charles Leverett, an Episcopal clergyman and Lowcountry planter, and his wife, Mary Maxcy Leverett."--Carolinian.




Masters of Small Worlds


Book Description

In this innovative study of the South Carolina Low Country, author Stephanie McCurry explores the place of the yeomanry in plantation society--the complex web of domestic and public relations within which they were enmeshed, and the contradictory politics of slave society by which that class of small farmers extracted the privileges of masterhood from the region's powerful planters. Insisting on the centrality of women as historical actors and gender as a category of analysis, this work shows how the fateful political choices made by the low-country yeomanry were rooted in the politics of the household, particularly in the customary relations of power male heads of independent households assumed over their dependents, whether slaves or free women and children. Such masterly prerogatives, practiced in the domestic sphere and redeemed in the public, explain the yeomanry's deep commitment to slavery and, ultimately, their ardent embrace of secession. By placing the yeomanry in the center of the drama, McCurry offers a significant reinterpretation of this volatile society on the road to Civil War. Through careful and creative use of a wide variety of archival sources, she brings vividly to life the small worlds of yeoman households, and the larger world of the South Carolina Low Country, the plantation South, and nineteenth-century America.




The Story of Soil Conservation in the South Carolina Piedmont, 1800-1860


Book Description

The present bulletin is an analytical account of some of these early attempts to conserve the soil in a region where cotton was the staple crop and water erosion the principal form of soil exhaustion.