Charleston and the Emergence of Middle-class Culture in the Revolutionary Era

Charleston and the Emergence of Middle-class Culture in the Revolutionary Era

Author: Jennifer L. Goloboy

Publisher: University of Georgia Press

Published: 2016

Total Pages: 213

ISBN-13: 0820349968

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"Very humble servants": colonial merchants and the limits of middle-class power -- The revolution, John Wilkes, and middle-class mob rule -- City of knavery: trade before the War of 1812 -- Friendship and sympathy, family and stability -- The War of 1812 and commercial disaster -- Mercantile professionalism and Charleston as a cotton port


Class Matters

Class Matters

Author: Simon Middleton

Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press

Published: 2011-06-03

Total Pages: 356

ISBN-13: 9780812205565

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As a category of historical analysis, class is dead—or so it has been reported over the past two decades. The contributors to Class Matters contest this demise. Although differing in their approaches, they all agree that socioeconomic inequality remains indispensable to a true understanding of the transition from the early modern to modern era in North America and the rest of the Atlantic world. As a whole, they chart the emergence of class as a concept and its subsequent loss of analytic purchase in Anglo-American historiography. The opening section considers the dynamics of class relations in the Atlantic world across the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries—from Iroquoian and Algonquian communities in North America to tobacco lords in Glasgow. Subsequent chapters examine the cultural development of a new and aspirational middle class and its relationship to changing economic conditions and the articulation of corporate and industrial ideologies in the era of the American Revolution and beyond. A final section shifts the focus to the poor and vulnerable—tenant farmers, infant paupers, and the victims of capital punishment. In each case the authors describe how elite Americans exercised their political and social power to structure the lives and deaths of weaker members of their communities. An impassioned afterword urges class historians to take up the legacies of historical materialism. Engaging the difficulties and range of meanings of class, the essays in Class Matters seek to energize the study of social relations in the Atlantic world.


Orangeburgh District, 1768-1868

Orangeburgh District, 1768-1868

Author: Daniel Marchant Culler

Publisher: Reprint Company Publishers

Published: 1995

Total Pages: 804

ISBN-13:

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Focuses primarily between the Revolutionary and Confederate Wars and on the sections that later became Orangeburg and Calhoun counties.


Charleston, South Carolina City Directories

Charleston, South Carolina City Directories

Author: James William Hagy

Publisher: Genealogical Publishing Com

Published: 1996

Total Pages: 169

ISBN-13: 0806346655

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These two complete indexes rectify a number of shortcomings in the existing finding aids to Maryland wills. Altogether about 5,000 wills for St. Mary's County and 7,500 wills for Somerset County, many of them dated prior to 1800, are indexed.