front cover of Ante-Bellum Alabama
Ante-Bellum Alabama
Town and Country
Weymouth T. Jordan
University of Alabama Press, 1986
Offers insights into important facets of Alabama’s ante-bellum history
 
Ante-Bellum Alabama: Town and Country was written to give the reader insight into important facets of Alabama’s ante-bellum history. Presented in the form of case studies from the pre-Civil War period, the book deals with a city, a town, a planter’s family, rural social life, attitudes concerning race, and Alabama’s early agricultural and industrial development.
 
Ante-bellum Alabama’s primary interest was agriculture; the chief crop was King Cotton; and most of the people were agriculturalists. Towns and cities came into existence to supply the agricultural needs of the state and to process and distribute farm commodities. Similarly, Alabama’s industrial development began with the manufacture of implements for farm use, in response to the state’s agricultural needs. Rural-agriculture influences dominated the American scene; and in this respect Alabama was typical of her region as well as of most of the United States.
 
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front cover of Hugh Davis and His Alabama Plantation
Hugh Davis and His Alabama Plantation
Weymouth T. Jordan
University of Alabama Press, 1948
Hugh Davis and His Alabama Plantation provides a detailed account of the founding, management, and finances of a Southern Antebellum plantation. After practicing law in Marion, Alabama for 14 years, Hugh Davis became a cotton planter in 1848 at Beaver Bend, where he brought 5,000 acres of Blackbelt land on the Cahaba River under cultivation and partook of the last decade of hubristic wealth before the coming of the Civil War.

Scholars and readers continue to illuminate the complex financial arrangements of the Antebellum South, many regions of which lacked basic banking services. Following the life of Davis traces his early years of apprenticeship and debt, the use of rotating credit, and the relationship of slaves to finances. The book is also full of fascinating details of his life, such as the setting out in one month of 750 yards of roses. This account also recounts the how this financial system and lifestyle were swept away by the Civil War.

Scholars and general readers interested in Southern history as illuminated not in macroeconomic theories but in the quotidian life and choices of one man will find much of interest in Davis's life.

 
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