About This Book
A traveler records observations from journeys across the Southern cotton states, combining geographic and economic description of cotton-growing districts with close reporting on slavery as an institution. The account details plantation organization, field labor, family separations caused by sales, and everyday living conditions of enslaved people, alongside portraits of large planters and poorer whites. It analyzes slavery’s legal, moral, and economic dimensions, considers its function as a poor-relief system, and examines how cotton markets shape labor choices. Chapters survey particular regions and planter types, and appendices supply regional statistics, slave-trade data, and labor-cost figures before concluding with reflections on risks confronting Southern society.
About the Author
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