Book Description
Provides information about what daily life was like on a southern plantation, including how slaves worked and dressed and what they ate.
Author : Sally Senzell Isaacs
Publisher : Heinemann-Raintree Library
Page : 36 pages
File Size : 18,91 MB
Release : 2001
Category : Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN : 9781575723167
Provides information about what daily life was like on a southern plantation, including how slaves worked and dressed and what they ate.
Author : Jacob Stroyer
Publisher : IndyPublish.com
Page : 102 pages
File Size : 25,34 MB
Release : 1890
Category : Fiction
ISBN :
MY LIFE IN THE SOUTH is Jacob Stroyer's absorbing first person account of his experiences of life as a slave. Jacob Stroyer was born into slavery in 1849 on a large plantation in South Carolina. In 1864 after the Civil War ended, Stroyer moved north and became an African Methodist Episcopal minister in Salem Massachusetts. Originally published in 1879, Stroyer's records his memories of his life in the south. While he describes his experiences and the burdens of life as a slave along with the severity of the discipline on a plantation, he also includes some of the customs of both slaves and their owners.This new and enlarged edition was printed in 1885 and is considered a valuable resource for all ages.
Author : John Brown
Publisher :
Page : 276 pages
File Size : 25,22 MB
Release : 1855
Category : Slavery
ISBN :
Author : N. B. De Saussure
Publisher : DigiCat
Page : 53 pages
File Size : 23,88 MB
Release : 2022-07-20
Category : History
ISBN :
Old Plantation Days is a memoir in the form of a letter that Nancy Bostick writes reflecting on her life on a plantation and her marriage and parenthood afterward during the Civil War. Excerpt: The South as I knew it has disappeared; the New South has risen from its ashes, filled with the energetic spirit of a new age.
Author : John W. Blassingame
Publisher :
Page : 414 pages
File Size : 22,63 MB
Release : 1979
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Stephen Currie
Publisher :
Page : 100 pages
File Size : 40,47 MB
Release : 2000
Category : History
ISBN : 9781560065395
This book details the living conditions of plantation slaves, examining house, field and artisan work, food and clothing, marriage, and more.
Author : Edward Ball
Publisher : Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Page : 623 pages
File Size : 13,3 MB
Release : 2017-10-24
Category : History
ISBN : 146689749X
Decades after this celebrated work of narrative nonfiction won the National Book Award and changed the American conversation about race, Slaves in the Family is reissued by FSG Classics, with a new preface by the author. The Ball family hails from South Carolina—Charleston and thereabouts. Their plantations were among the oldest and longest-standing plantations in the South. Between 1698 and 1865, close to four thousand black people were born into slavery under the Balls or were bought by them. In Slaves in the Family, Edward Ball recounts his efforts to track down and meet the descendants of his family's slaves. Part historical narrative, part oral history, part personal story of investigation and catharsis, Slaves in the Family is, in the words of Pat Conroy, "a work of breathtaking generosity and courage, a magnificent study of the complexity and strangeness and beauty of the word ‘family.'"
Author : Amy E. Potter
Publisher : University of Georgia Press
Page : 365 pages
File Size : 47,48 MB
Release : 2022-03-15
Category : Art
ISBN : 082036813X
Remembering Enslavement explores plantation museums as sites for contesting and reforming public interpretations of slavery in the American South. Emerging out of a three-year National Science Foundation grant (2014–17), the book turns a critical eye toward the growing inclusion of the formerly enslaved within these museums, specifically examining advances but also continuing inequalities in how they narrate and memorialize the formerly enslaved. Using assemblage theory as a framework, Remembering Enslavement offers an innovative approach for studying heritage sites, retelling and remapping the ways that slavery and the enslaved are included in southern plantation museums. It examines multiple plantation sites across geographic areas, considering the experiences of a diversity of actors: tourists, museum managers/owners, and tour guides/interpreters. This approach allows for an understanding of regional variations among plantation museums, narratives, and performances, as well as more in-depth study of the plantation tour experience and public interpretations. The authors conclude the book with a set of questions designed to help professionals reassemble plantation museum narratives and landscapes to more justly position the formerly enslaved at their center.
Author : Richard S. Dunn
Publisher : Harvard University Press
Page : 553 pages
File Size : 46,97 MB
Release : 2014-11-04
Category : Biography & Autobiography
ISBN : 0674735366
Richard Dunn reconstructs the lives of three generations of slaves on a sugar estate in Jamaica and a plantation in Virginia, to understand the starkly different forms slavery took. Deadly work regimens and rampant disease among Jamaican slaves contrast with population expansion in Virginia leading to the selling of slaves and breakup of families.
Author : Catherine Clinton
Publisher : Pantheon
Page : 353 pages
File Size : 33,79 MB
Release : 1984-02-12
Category : History
ISBN : 0394722531
This pioneering study of the much-mythologized Southern belle offers the first serious look at the lives of white women and their harsh and restricted place in the slave society before the Civil War. Drawing on the diaries, letters, and memoirs of hundreds of planter wives and daughters, Clinton sets before us in vivid detail the daily life of the plantation mistress and her ambiguous intermediary position in the hierarchy between slave and master. "The Plantation Mistress challenges and reinterprets a host of issues related to the Old South. The result is a book that forces us to rethink some of our basic assumptions about two peculiar institutions -- the slave plantation and the nineteenth-century family. It approaches a familiar subject from a new angle, and as a result, permanently alters our understanding of the Old South and women's place in it.