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A Small Place in Georgia: Yeoman Cultural Persistance
Kersey, Terrence Lee
Kersey, Terrence Lee
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Abstract
In antebellum Upcounty Georgia, the Southern yeomanry developed a society independent of the planter class. Many of the studies of the pre-Civil War Southern yeomanry describe a class that is living within the cracks of a planter-dominated society, using, and subject to those institutions that served the planter class. Yet in Forsyth County, a yeomanry-dominated society created and nurtured institutions that met their class needs, not parasitically using those developed by the planter class for their own needs.
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2009-05-21
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Keywords
Baptist, Methodist, Country store, Slavery, Georgia, Upcountry, South, Antebellum, Yeomanry
Citation
Kersey, Terrence Lee. "A Small Place in Georgia: Yeoman Cultural Persistance." Thesis. Georgia State University, 2009. https://doi.org/10.57709/1059640
Embargo Lift Date
2012-01-26
