Marriages of Mobile County, Alabama, 1813-1855

Marriages of Mobile County, Alabama, 1813-1855

Author: Clinton P. King

Publisher: Genealogical Publishing Com

Published: 1985

Total Pages: 190

ISBN-13: 0806311355

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

"This index contains an alphabetical listing of brides and grooms from three sources of information: Marriage & bond books #1-14 of Probate records of Mobile County; Index to marriages, 1813-1855, direct and indirect; Appendix Z-1, Peter J. Hamilton, Colonial Mobile (1910 ed.)."--Foreword.


Southern Reporter

Southern Reporter

Author:

Publisher:

Published: 1920

Total Pages: 1014

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Includes the decisions of the Supreme Courts of Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, and Mississippi, the Appellate Courts of Alabama and, Sept. 1928/Jan. 1929-Jan./Mar. 1941, the Courts of Appeal of Louisiana.


New Men, New Cities, New South

New Men, New Cities, New South

Author: Don H. Doyle

Publisher: UNC Press Books

Published: 2014-03-24

Total Pages: 396

ISBN-13: 146961717X

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Cities were the core of a changing economy and culture that penetrated the rural hinterland and remade the South in the decades following the Civil War. In New Men, New Cities, New South, Don Doyle argues that if the plantation was the world the slaveholders made, the urban centers of the New South formed the world made by merchants, manufacturers, and financiers. The book's title evokes the exuberant rhetoric of New South boosterism, which continually extolled the "new men" who dominated the city-building process, but Doyle also explores the key role of women in defining the urban upper class. Doyle uses four cities as case studies to represent the diversity of the region and to illuminate the responses businessmen made to the challenges and opportunities of the postbellum South. Two interior railroad centers, Atlanta and Nashville, displayed the most vibrant commercial and industrial energy of the region, and both cities fostered a dynamic class of entrepreneurs. These business leaders' collective efforts to develop their cities and to establish formal associations that served their common interests forged them into a coherent and durable urban upper class by the late nineteenth century. The rising business class also helped establish a new pattern of race relations shaped by a commitment to economic progress through the development of the South's human resources, including the black labor force. But the "new men" of the cities then used legal segregation to control competition between the races. Charleston and Mobile, old seaports that had served the antebellum plantation economy with great success, stagnated when their status as trade centers declined after the war. Although individual entrepreneurs thrived in both cities, their efforts at community enterprise were unsuccessful, and in many instances they remained outside the social elite. As a result, conservative ways became more firmly entrenched, including a system of race relations based on the antebellum combination of paternalism and neglect rather than segregation. Talent, energy, and investment capital tended to drain away to more vital cities. In many respects, as Doyle shows, the business class of the New South failed in its quest for economic development and social reform. Nevertheless, its legacy of railroads, factories, urban growth, and changes in the character of race relations shaped the world most southerners live in today.