The Ruling RaceKnopf Doubleday Publishing Group, 17 Apr 2013 - 320 halaman This pathbreaking social history of the slaveholding South marks a turn in our understanding of antebellum America and the coming of the Civil War. Oakes's bracing 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. |
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... Louisiana up the shores of the Mississippi River. Yet this geographical bias can hardly be attributed to the older age of the areas represented, since the manuscript collections thin out dramatically for the years before 1820, leaving a ...
... Louisiana up the shores of the Mississippi River. Yet this geographical bias can hardly be attributed to the older age of the areas represented, since the manuscript collections thin out dramatically for the years before 1820, leaving a ...
Halaman
... Louisiana, on a huge tract of land, then went to Jamaica to buy more slaves. From these auspicious beginnings Dunbar made himself one of the most prosperous planters in that fast-growing region. In 1783 he moved to a plantation up the ...
... Louisiana, on a huge tract of land, then went to Jamaica to buy more slaves. From these auspicious beginnings Dunbar made himself one of the most prosperous planters in that fast-growing region. In 1783 he moved to a plantation up the ...
Halaman
... could be found in French Louisiana, where sugar plantations were already in operation. And in the 1780's, some had even gone up the Mississippi River and spotted Natchez —destined to become the wealthiest area of the.
... could be found in French Louisiana, where sugar plantations were already in operation. And in the 1780's, some had even gone up the Mississippi River and spotted Natchez —destined to become the wealthiest area of the.
Halaman
... Louisiana were not yet dominated by wealthy Americans. But the richest lands on the eastern seaboard were pretty much settled, and they would never feel the most intense effects of the spectacular inland cotton boom. The fortuitous ...
... Louisiana were not yet dominated by wealthy Americans. But the richest lands on the eastern seaboard were pretty much settled, and they would never feel the most intense effects of the spectacular inland cotton boom. The fortuitous ...
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Masterclass Pluralism | |
The Slaveholders Pilgrimage | |
The Convenient | |
Freedom and Bondage | |
PLANTATIONS PLEBEIANS | |
Factories in the Fields | |
Masters of Tradition | |
The Slaveholders Revolution | |
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Alabama American antebellum South Atlantic slave trade Baton Rouge bondage bondsmen century Charles Lyell colonial complained conflict conservative slaveholders cooperationist County crops DeBow’s Review declared defense of slavery democracy democratic Diary economic Edmund Ruffin entry evangelical Family Papers farm farmers father fear Fitzhugh Florida Frederick Bates frontier George Georgia Guion Henry Watson Hist History human ideology immigrants influence 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 Plantation Records political population principles profits proslavery prosperity Protestantism punishment reflected reformers religious resistance Revolution rules Sargent Seaboard secession slave trade slaveholder wrote slaveholding class slaveholding culture slavery small slaveholders social society South Carolina Southern Cultivator Tennessee Texas tradition Union upward mobility Virginia Watson Papers wealth wealthiest William William Byrd William Dunbar York