The Ruling Race: A History of American SlaveholdersKnopf, 1982 - 307 halaman "This ... social history of the slaveholding South marks a turn in our understanding of antebellum America and the coming of the Civil War. Oakes's ... analysis breaks the myth that slaveholders were a paternalistic aristocracy dedicated to the values of honor, race, and section. Instead they emerge as having much in common with their entrepreneurial counterparts in the North: they were committed to free-market commercialism and political democracy for white males. The Civil War was not an inevitable conflict between civilizations on different paths but the crack-up of a single system, the result of people and events"--From publisher's description. |
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Halaman 38
... County , Georgia , indicate that in the thirty years following 1829 the planters - those with twenty slaves or more - increased their share of the slave population from twenty - five to seventy percent . In Harrison County , Texas ...
... County , Georgia , indicate that in the thirty years following 1829 the planters - those with twenty slaves or more - increased their share of the slave population from twenty - five to seventy percent . In Harrison County , Texas ...
Halaman 77
... counties the majority of the wealthiest planters left the area in the ten years from 1850 to 1860. In Dallas County alone , fifty - four percent of the sons of planters were gone ; over sixty percent of those whose fathers owned between ...
... counties the majority of the wealthiest planters left the area in the ten years from 1850 to 1860. In Dallas County alone , fifty - four percent of the sons of planters were gone ; over sixty percent of those whose fathers owned between ...
Halaman 144
... county court . Although persistent reform efforts weakened their authority in many states , county courts in some areas remained , as one Southerner wrote , " the most powerful branch of the judiciary , capable of exerting a greater ...
... county court . Although persistent reform efforts weakened their authority in many states , county courts in some areas remained , as one Southerner wrote , " the most powerful branch of the judiciary , capable of exerting a greater ...
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Revolutionary Slaveholders | 3 |
THE MARKET CULTURE 335 | 35 |
The Slaveholders Pilgrimage | 69 |
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Istilah dan frasa umum
Alabama American antebellum South Atlantic slave trade Baton Rouge bondage bondsmen century Charles Lyell colonial complained conservative slaveholders cooperationist Cotton Planter County crops DeBow's Review declared defense of slavery democracy democratic Diary economic Edmund Ruffin entry equal evangelical Family Papers farm Farmers father fear Fitzhugh Florida Frederick Bates frontier George Georgia Guion Henry Watson Hist History human ideology immigrants James John John Clopton Journal labor Letters Lide live Louisiana majority migration Mississippi moved Natchez negroes never North northern Old South Olmsted overseer owners paternalism paternalistic percent plantation management political population principles profits proslavery prosperity Protestantism punishment racist reformers religious resistance Revolution rules Sargent Seaboard secession slave trade slaveholding class slavery small slaveholders social society South Carolina Southern Agriculturist Southern Cultivator Tennessee Texas tion tradition Union upward mobility Virginia Watson Papers wealth wealthiest William William Byrd William Dunbar York
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The Emergence of Black English: Text and Commentary Guy Bailey,Natalie Maynor,Patricia Cukor-Avila Pratinjau tidak tersedia - 1991 |