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From Slavery to Agrarian Capitalism in the Cotton Plantation South: Central Georgia, 1800-1880 (Fred W. Morrison Series in Southern Studies)
Published in Paperback by Univ of North Carolina Pr (1995)
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On the causes and consequences of secession in Georgia
Middle English Dictionary (Volume S.8)
Published in Paperback by University of Michigan Press (1988)
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Yeah, I got snookered
I was very surprised when I ordered this book and found out that yes, indeed, it was merely a very tiny portion of what I had expected. I suppose I should have known from the price, but the description (at least at that time) did not make it clear that it wasn't the entire dictionary.
Must have more complete info before ordering...
While this may be a very thorough source for the words it covers, it should be noted in the basic information that this is ONLY 128 pages of a 15,000 page work. The description above is very misleading.
5 stars
itz a dictionary. what more can i say
Communicating Science: The Scientific Article from the 17th Century to the Present
Published in Hardcover by Oxford University Press (2002)
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Free at Last: A Documentary History of Slavery, Freedom, and the Civil War
Published in Hardcover by New Press (1992)
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Freedom's Soldiers : The Black Military Experience in the Civil War
Published in Paperback by Cambridge Univ Pr (Pap Txt) (1998)
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Freedom: Volume 1, Series 1: The Destruction of Slavery : A Documentary History of Emancipation, 1861-1867
Published in Hardcover by Cambridge University Press (1986)
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Freedom: Volume 1, Series 2: The Black Military Experience : A Documentary History of Emancipation, 1861-1867
Published in Hardcover by Cambridge University Press (1985)
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Freedom: Volume 2, Series 1: The Wartime Genesis of Free Labor: The Upper South : A Documentary History of Emancipation, 1861-1867
Published in Hardcover by Cambridge University Press (1993)
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Slaves No More : Three Essays on Emancipation and the Civil War
Published in Paperback by Cambridge Univ Pr (Pap Txt) (1993)
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Despite their claims that a slave republic was the only form of government capable of producing harmonious social relations, planters were aware that the growing poverty in the region undermined this argument and threatened to turn the yeomanry and poor whites against them. Evidence of this division could be seen in the growth of party politics, with planters, town dwellers, and immigrants preferring the Democratic Party, and yeomen and poor whites turning to the Know-Nothings. Planters hoped to alleviate social tensions by funding poor relief, public education, and internal improvements that would bring new jobs, but the yeomanry, while approving in theory of public works, rejected them out of opposition to the higher taxes such projects would entail. Once the Civil War broke out, planter actions only furthered the destruction of the social and economic relations they had hoped to save, as planters refused to devote all resources to winning the war at the expense of current profits. They continued to plant cotton when grain was needed to supply troops and would not contract out their slaves to war materiel producers at low prices, resulting in rising prices for yeomen families who could not maintain self-sufficiency with their household heads away fighting the war and decreasing purchasing power for white laborers. Planters were unable to feed or protect their slaves from Union troops, destroying slaves' faith in paternalism and forcing them to take care of themselves, which prepared them for independence following emancipation.
Following the war, planters hoped to exercise the same control over free blacks as they had over slaves, but with the help of the Freedman's Bureau and Radical Republicans, free blacks negotiated for more control over working conditions, their families, religious institutions, and rights as citizens. While facing legal discrimination at every turn, they were in many cases able to negotiate contracts as sharecroppers, educate their children, exercise their right to vote (though not to hold office), and establish their own churches and political movements. Yeomen also benefited somewhat in that they now had unprecedented ability to hire black laborers, but were harmed by new laws limiting hunting and fishing on unenclosed lands, which diminished their ability to subsist as much as it did that of freedmen. Both black and white non-planters increasingly turned to wage labor, marking central Georgia's transition to a capitalist economic system. Planters lost a good deal of their political and economic dominance, but maintained as much of their social power as they could under the newly bourgeois order.