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1859 SOUTHERN PLANTATION SLAVERY. Rare Georgia Pro-Slavery Periodical for Re-Opening Slave Trade.Very rare entire year, with no other examples on the market, of this important year of the Southern Cultivator, i. e. Plantation Owner, from the immediate run up to the Civil War. Its pages are full of pro slavery concerns, including a series of articles arguing for the re opening of the Slave Trade, which had been formally abolished in 1808. Also, fascinating content regarding southern politics, southern farming, extensive content on attempts to
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Very rare entire year, with no other examples on the market, of this important year of the Southern Cultivator, i.e. Plantation Owner, from the immediate run-up to the Civil War. Its pages are full of pro-slavery concerns, including a series of articles arguing for the re-opening of the Slave Trade, which had been formally abolished in 1808. 

Also, fascinating content regarding southern politics, southern farming, extensive content on attempts to cultivate a southern wine market, items on plantation wife, on the emergence of the new Southern Belle, etc., 

Lee, D. and D. Redmond and C. W. Howard [Eds.]. The Southern Cultivator, A Monthly Journal, Devoted to the Interests of Southern Agriculture, and Designed to Improve both the Soil and the Mind; to Elevate the Character of the Tillers of the Soil, and to Introduce a More Enlightened System of Agriculture. Illustrated with Numerous Elegant Engravings. Augusta, Georgia. William S. Jones. 1859. 376pp.

Contents include: The Study of Manures; Farmers - Dignify Your Profession; The Re-Opening of the Slave Trade; Pedigrees of Devon Cattle; On the Transfer of Bees from One Hive to Another; The Western Fever - Moving [Westward Expansion]; Mississippi Wines; How to Prevent Sows from Killing their Young; Moles and Chinese Sugar Cane; The Camel - His Nature Habits and Uses [for import to the southern states]; Gumbo Soup; Agriculture in South Carolina; The Earliest and Best Mode of Raising Tobacco; Emigration West - Georgians Wanted!; Poem - The Farmer Man - A Georgi-ac; The Origin of the Cotton Gin; Sensible Negro!; Grape Culture in the South; Mustang Wine in Texas; A Lecture on Hereditary Blood in Man and other Mammalia; in the University of Georgia by Daniel Lee; The African Slave Trade by Garnett Andrews of Georgia [Extensive by an influential pro-slavery, anti-secession Georgia Politician]; The Guano Question; An Improved Breed of Men [Early Eugenics, etc.]; Cultivation of the Pea-Nut [Peanut]; Review of "An Argument Against the Policy of Re-Opening the Slave Trade" by Robert G. Harper of Georgia [Extensive]; Re-Opening the Slave Trade [Extensive]; Mortality of Different Races [Colored Americans were twice as high, owing, according to the chart, "undoubtedly to the race being in the northern climate."]; Song of the Cotton Plant by John Anrobus [Poem]; Champagne Wine - Some Curious Facts about It; Plantation Architecture [with illustrations]; Disunion and Abolition! As Seen through a Pair of Very Keen Yankee Spectacles [Extensive]; The Old Peach Tree [Poem]; Land and Labor ["Too much for a darkey?" etc.]; The Tom-Boy [early usage of this term explained]; On the Intermarriage of Cousins; Re-Opening the Slave Trade [again, extensive]; Review of "An Historical Sketch of Slavery from the Earliest Periods" by Thomas R. R. Cobb; A Georgia Negress in Africa; How to Cure Stammering; Plantation Management - On the Treatment of Negroes by a Mississippi Planter; Is the Earth Wearing Out? Duties of a Lady in the Household; The Properly Qualified House Wife; Fashionable Women; The High Price of Horses; The Cherokee Baptist College at Cassville; Steam Machinery for the Farm; Making the Homestead Beautiful; Lord Brougham and Slavery in Georgia; etc. etc. 

Good. Heavily worn half calf, split at hinges, etc. but solid, clean, and very much ready for use. Some toning as shown. Illustrated throughout. 

1859 SOUTHERN PLANTATION SLAVERY. Rare Georgia Pro-Slavery Periodical for Re-Opening Slave Trade.

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