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Black majority: Negroes in colonial South Carolina from 1670 through the Stono Rebellion
Peter H. Wood
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Frontmatter
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Acknowledgments (page xi)
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Introduction (page xiii)
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Notes on the Text and a List of Footnote Abbreviations (page xxi)
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Prologue: Small Beginnings (page 3)
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PART ONE: AFRICAN WORKERS IN THE CAROLINA LOWLANDS
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I The Colony of a Colony (page 13)
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II Black Labor — White Rice (page 35)
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III "The Sovereign Ray of Health" (page 63)
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PART TWO: THE CHANGING FRONTIER
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IV Black Pioneers (page 95)
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V "More Like a Negro Country" (page 131)
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VI Gullah Speech: The Roots of Black English (page 167)
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PART THREE: RISING TENSIONS
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VII Growing Initiative Among Blacks (page 195)
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VIII Mounting Anxiety Among Whites (page 218)
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IX Runaways: Slaves Who Stole Themselves (page 239)
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PART FOUR: A COLONY IN CONFLICT
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X Patterns of White Control (page 271)
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XI Patterns of Black Resistance (page 285)
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XII The Stono Rebellion and Its Consequences (page 308)
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Appendixes (page 331)
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Bibliographical Note (page 344)
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Index
Citable Link
Published: 1975
Publisher: Alfred A. Knopf
- 9780307817105 (ebook)
- 9780394483962 (hardcover)