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Plain Folk of the Old South

Plain Folk of the Old South is a 1949 book by Vanderbilt University historian Frank Lawrence Owsley, one of the Southern Agrarians. In it he used statistical data to analyze the makeup of Southern society, contending that yeoman farmers made up a larger middle class than was generally thought.[1]

Historical perspectives edit

Historians have long debated the social, economic, and political roles of Southern classes. Terms used by scholars for the self-sufficient farmers at the middle economic level include "common people" and "yeomen." At the lowest level were the struggling poor whites, known disparagingly in some areas of the South as "Crackers."[2]

In the colonial and antebellum years, subsistence farmers tended to settle in the back country and uplands. They generally did not raise commodity crops and owned few or no slaves. Jeffersonian and Jacksonian Democrats favored the term "yeoman" for a land-owning farmer. It emphasized an independent political spirit and economic self-reliance.[3]

Views of Olmsted, Dodd, and Phillips edit

Northerners such as Frederick Law Olmsted, who traveled in and wrote about the 1850s South, through the early 20th-century historians such as William E. Dodd and Ulrich B. Phillips, assessed common southerners as minor players in the antebellum social, economic, and political life of the South.

Twentieth-century romantic portrayals of the antebellum South, such as Margaret Mitchell's novel Gone with the Wind (1936) and the 1939 film adaptation, mostly ignored the yeomen. The nostalgic view of the South emphasized the elite planter class of wealth and refinement, controlling large plantations and numerous slaves.

Novelist Erskine Caldwell's Tobacco Road portrayed the degraded condition of impoverished whites dwelling beyond the great plantations.[4]

Frank Lawrence Owsley edit

The major challenge to the view of planter dominance came from historian Frank Lawrence Owsley in Plain Folk of the Old South (1949). His work ignited a long historiographical debate.[5] Owsley started with the work of Daniel R. Hundley, who in 1860 had defined the southern middle class as "farmers, planters, traders, storekeepers, artisans, mechanics, a few manufacturers, a goodly number of country school teachers, and a host of half-fledged country lawyers, doctors, parsons, and the like".[6] To find these people, Owsley turned to the name-by-name files on the manuscript federal census. Using their own newly invented codes, the Owsleys created databases from the manuscript federal census returns, tax and trial records, and local government documents and wills. They gathered data on all southerners. Historian Vernon Burton described Owsley's Plain Folk of the Old South, as "one of the most influential works on southern history ever written".[7]

Plain Folk argued that southern society was not dominated by planter aristocrats, but that yeoman farmers played a significant role in it. The religion, language, and culture of these common people created a democratic "plain folk" society. Critics say Owsley overemphasized the size of the southern landholding middle class, while excluding the large class of poor whites who owned neither land nor slaves. Owsley believed that shared economic interests united southern farmers; critics suggest the vast difference in economic classes between the elite and subsistence farmers meant they did not have the same values or outlook.[2]

Recent scholarship edit

In his study of Edgefield County, South Carolina, Orville Vernon Burton classified white society into the poor, the yeoman middle class, and the elite. A clear line demarcated the elite, but according to Burton, the line between poor and yeoman was less distinct. Stephanie McCurry argues that yeomen were clearly distinguished from poor whites by their ownership of land (real property). Yeomen were "self-working farmers", distinct from the elite because they physically labored on their land alongside any slaves they owned. Planters with numerous slaves had work that was essentially managerial, and often they supervised an overseer rather than the slaves themselves.[8]

Wetherington (2005) argues the plain folk (of Georgia) supported secession to defend their families, homes, and notions of white liberty. During the war, the established patriarchy continued to control the home front and kept it functioning, even though growing numbers of plain folk joined the new wartime poor. Wetherington suggests that their localism and racism dovetailed with a republican ideology founded on Jeffersonian notions of an "economically independent yeomanry sharing common interests".[9] Plain folk during the war raised subsistence crops and vegetables and relied on a free and open range to hunt hogs. Examples of these conditions can be seen in the award-winning novel Cold Mountain.

Before the war, they became more active in the cotton and slave markets, but plain folk remained unwilling to jeopardize their self-sufficiency and the stability of their neighborhoods for the economic interests of planters. The soldiers had their own reasons for fighting. First and foremost, they sought to protect hearth and home from Yankee threats. White supremacy and masculinity depended on slavery, which Lincoln's Republicans threatened. Plain-folk concepts of masculinity explain why so many men enlisted: they wanted to be worthy of the privileges of men, including the affections of female patriots. By March 1862, the piney woods region of Georgia had a 60% enlistment rate, comparable to that found in planter areas.[10]

As the war dragged on, hardship became a way of life. Wetherington reports that enough men remained home to preserve the paternalistic social order, but there were too few to prevent mounting deprivation. Wartime shortages increased the economic divide between planters and yeoman farmers; nevertheless, some planters took seriously their paternalistic obligations by selling their corn to plain folk at the official Confederate rate "out of a spirit of patriotism."[11] Wetherington's argument weakens other scholars' suggestions that class conflict led to Confederate defeat. More damaging to Confederate nationalism was the growing localism that grew, as areas had to fend for themselves as William Tecumseh Sherman's forces came nearer.

During Reconstruction Era after the war, plain folk split. Most supported the conservative (or Democratic Party) position, but some were "Scalawags" who supported the Republican Party.[12]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Carey (2001)
  2. ^ a b Hyde (2005)
  3. ^ Campbell (1987)
  4. ^ Darden Asbury, Pyron (1981). "The Inner War of Southern History". Southern Studies. 20 (1): 5–19.
  5. ^ Hyde (1997)
  6. ^ Hundley (1860); Tommy W. Rogers, "D. R. Hundley: A Multi-Class Thesis of Social Stratification in the Antebellum South," Mississippi Quarterly 1970 23(2): 135–154
  7. ^ Vernon O. Burton, "Frank Lawrence Owsley," in American National Biography, Volume 16 ed by John Arthur Garraty (1985)
  8. ^ Burton (1985)
  9. ^ Wetherington (2005) p, 12
  10. ^ Wetherington (2005)
  11. ^ Wetherington (2005) p. 171
  12. ^ Hahn (1983)

Further reading edit

  • Ash, S. V. (1991). "Poor Whites in the Occupied South, 1861–1865". The Journal of Southern History. 57 (1): 39–62. doi:10.2307/2209873. JSTOR 2209873.
  • Atack, Jeremy. "The Agricultural Ladder Revisited: A New Look at an Old Question with Some Data for 1860," Agricultural History Vol. 63, No. 1 (Winter, 1989), pp. 1–25 in JSTOR
  • Atack, Jeremy. "Tenants and Yeomen in the Nineteenth Century," Agricultural History, Vol. 62, No. 3, (Summer, 1988), pp. 6–32 in JSTOR
  • Bolton, Charles C. "Planters, Plain Folk, and Poor Whites in the Old South." in Lacy K. Ford, ed., A Companion to the Civil War and Reconstruction, (2005) 75–93.
  • Bolton, Charles C. Poor Whites of the Antebellum South: Tenants and Laborers in Central North Carolina and Northeast Mississippi (Duke University Press, 1994).
  • Bruce, Dickson D. Jr. And They All Sang Hallelujah: Plain Folk Camp Meeting Religion, 1800–1845 (1974)
  • Burton, Orville Vernon. In My Father's House Are Many Mansions: Family and Community in Edgefield, South Carolina (1985)
  • Campbell, Randolph B. and Richard G. Lowe. Planters & Plain Folk: Agriculture in Antebellum Texas. (1987)
  • Campbell, Randolph B. "Planters and Plain Folks: The Social Structure of the Antebellum South," in John B. Boles and Evelyn Thomas Nolen, eds., Interpreting Southern History(1987), 48–77;
  • Campbell, Randolph B. and Richard G. Lowe. Wealth and Power in Antebellum Texas (1977)
  • Carey, Anthony Gene. "Frank L. Owsley's Plain Folk of the Old South after Fifty Years," in Glenn Feldman, ed., Reading Southern History: Essays on Interpreters and Interpretations (2001)
  • Cash, Wilbur J. The Mind of the South (1941), famous classic
  • Flynt, J. Wayne Dixie's Forgotten People: The South's Poor Whites (1979). deals with 20th century.
  • Cecil-Fronsman, Bill. Common Whites: Class and Culture in Antebellum North Carolina (1992)
  • Delfino, Susanna, Michele Gillespie, and Louis M. Kyriakoudes, eds. Southern Society and Its Transformation (U of Missouri Press; 2011) 248pp. Scholarly essays on ante-bellum working poor, non-slaveholding whites, and small planters and other "middling" property holders
  • Genovese, Eugene D. "Yeomen Farmers in a Slaveholders' Democracy," Agricultural History Vol. 49, No. 2 (Apr. 1975), pp. 331–342 in JSTOR
  • Hahn, Steven. The Roots of Southern Populism: Yeoman Farmers and the Transformation of the Georgia Upcountry, 1850–1890 (1983)
  • Harris, J. William. Plain Folk and Gentry in a Slave Society: White Liberty and Black Slavery in Augusta's Hinterlands (1985)
  • Hyde, Samuel C. Jr. ed., Plain Folk of the South Revisited (1997).
  • Hyde, Samuel C. Jr. (2005). "Plain Folk Reconsidered: Historiographical Ambiguity in Search of Definition". Journal of Southern History. 71 (4): 803–830. doi:10.2307/27648905. JSTOR 27648905.
  • Hyde, Samuel C. Jr. "Plain Folk Yeomanry in the Antebellum South," in John Boles Jr., ed., Companion to the American South, (2004) pp 139–55
  • Hundley, Daniel R. Social Relations in Our Southern States (1860; reprint 1979)
  • Linden, Fabian. "Economic Democracy in the Slave South: An Appraisal of Some Recent Views," Journal of Negro History, 31 (April 1946), 140–89 in JSTOR; emphasizes statistical inequality
  • Kwas, Mary L. "Simon T. Sanders and the Meredith Clan: The Case for Kinship Studies,” Arkansas Historical Quarterly (Oct. 2006): 250–273.
  • Lowe, Richard G. and Randolph B. Campbell, Planters and Plain Folk: Agriculture in Antebellum Texas (1987)
  • Osthaus, Carl R. (2004). "The Work Ethic of the Plain Folk: Labor and Religion in the Old South". Journal of Southern History. 70 (4): 745–82. doi:10.2307/27648560. JSTOR 27648560.
  • McCurry, Stephanie. Masters of Small Worlds: Yeoman Households, Gender Relations, and the Political Culture of the Antebellum South Carolina Low Country (1995),
  • McWhiney, Grady. In Cracker Culture: Celtic Ways in the Old South (1988)
  • Morgan, Edmund S. American Slavery, American Freedom: The Ordeal of Colonial Virginia (1975).
  • Newby, I. A. Plain Folk in the New South: Social Change and Cultural Persistence, 1880–1915 (1989). concentrates on the poorest whites
  • Osterhaus, Carl R. (2004). "The Work Ethic of the Plain Folk: Labor and Religion in the Old South". Journal of Southern History. 70 (4): 745–782. doi:10.2307/27648560. JSTOR 27648560.
  • Otto, John Solomon (1985). "The Migration of the Southern Plain Folk: An Interdisciplinary Synthesis". Journal of Southern History. 51 (2): 183–200. doi:10.2307/2208824. JSTOR 2208824.
  • Otto, John Solomon (1987). "Plain Folk, Lost Frontiersmen, and Hillbillies: The Southern Mountain Folk in History and Popular Culture". Southern Studies. 26: 5–17.
  • Otto, John Solomon (1983). "Southern Plain 'Folk' Agriculture: A Reconsideration". Plantation Society in the Americas. 2 (1): 29–36.
  • Owsley, Frank Lawrence. Plain Folk of the Old South (1949), the classic study
  • Owsley, Frank Lawrence; Owsley, Harriet C. (1940). "The Economic Basis of Society in the Late Ante-Bellum South". Journal of Southern History. 6 (1): 24–25. doi:10.2307/2191937. JSTOR 2191937.
  • Rogers, Tommy W. (1970). "D. R. Hundley: A Multi-Class Thesis of Social Stratification in the Antebellum South". Mississippi Quarterly. 23 (2): 135–154.
  • Sarson, Steven, "Yeoman Farmers in a Planters' Republic: Socioeconomic Conditions and Relations in Early National Prince George's County, Maryland,” Journal of the Early Republic, 29 (Spring 2009), 63–99.
  • Schaefer, Donald (1978). "Yeomen Farmers and Economic Democracy: A Study of Wealth and Economic Mobility in the Western Tobacco Region, 1850–1860". Explorations in Economic History. 15 (4): 421–437. doi:10.1016/0014-4983(78)90047-5.
  • Sherrod, Ricky L. (2009). "Plain Folk, Planters, and the Complexities of Southern Society: Kinship Ties in Nineteenth-Century Northwest Louisiana and Northeast Texas". Southwestern Historical Quarterly. 113 (1): 1–31. doi:10.1353/swh.2009.0056. S2CID 144029275.
  • Wetherington, Mark V. Plain Folk's Fight: The Civil War and Reconstruction in Piney Woods Georgia (2005)
  • Wiley, Bell I. The Plain People of the Confederacy (1963)
  • Wilkison, Kyle G. Yeomen, Sharecroppers and Socialists: Plain Folk Protest in Texas, 1870–1914. (2008).
  • Winters, Donald L. (1987). "'Plain Folk' of the Old South Reexamined: Economic Democracy in Tennessee". Journal of Southern History. 53 (4): 565–586. doi:10.2307/2208775. JSTOR 2208775.
  • Woodward, C. Vann. Tom Watson: Agrarian Rebel (1938). on Georgia leader 1890–1920 online edition
  • Wright, Gavin (1970). "'Economic Democracy' and the Concentration of Agricultural Wealth in the Cotton South, 1850–1860". Agricultural History. 44 (1): 63–93. JSTOR 3741361., a statistical critique of Owsley

plain, folk, south, 1949, book, vanderbilt, university, historian, frank, lawrence, owsley, southern, agrarians, used, statistical, data, analyze, makeup, southern, society, contending, that, yeoman, farmers, made, larger, middle, class, than, generally, thoug. Plain Folk of the Old South is a 1949 book by Vanderbilt University historian Frank Lawrence Owsley one of the Southern Agrarians In it he used statistical data to analyze the makeup of Southern society contending that yeoman farmers made up a larger middle class than was generally thought 1 Contents 1 Historical perspectives 1 1 Views of Olmsted Dodd and Phillips 1 2 Frank Lawrence Owsley 1 3 Recent scholarship 2 See also 3 References 4 Further readingHistorical perspectives editHistorians have long debated the social economic and political roles of Southern classes Terms used by scholars for the self sufficient farmers at the middle economic level include common people and yeomen At the lowest level were the struggling poor whites known disparagingly in some areas of the South as Crackers 2 In the colonial and antebellum years subsistence farmers tended to settle in the back country and uplands They generally did not raise commodity crops and owned few or no slaves Jeffersonian and Jacksonian Democrats favored the term yeoman for a land owning farmer It emphasized an independent political spirit and economic self reliance 3 Views of Olmsted Dodd and Phillips edit Northerners such as Frederick Law Olmsted who traveled in and wrote about the 1850s South through the early 20th century historians such as William E Dodd and Ulrich B Phillips assessed common southerners as minor players in the antebellum social economic and political life of the South Twentieth century romantic portrayals of the antebellum South such as Margaret Mitchell s novel Gone with the Wind 1936 and the 1939 film adaptation mostly ignored the yeomen The nostalgic view of the South emphasized the elite planter class of wealth and refinement controlling large plantations and numerous slaves Novelist Erskine Caldwell s Tobacco Road portrayed the degraded condition of impoverished whites dwelling beyond the great plantations 4 Frank Lawrence Owsley edit The major challenge to the view of planter dominance came from historian Frank Lawrence Owsley in Plain Folk of the Old South 1949 His work ignited a long historiographical debate 5 Owsley started with the work of Daniel R Hundley who in 1860 had defined the southern middle class as farmers planters traders storekeepers artisans mechanics a few manufacturers a goodly number of country school teachers and a host of half fledged country lawyers doctors parsons and the like 6 To find these people Owsley turned to the name by name files on the manuscript federal census Using their own newly invented codes the Owsleys created databases from the manuscript federal census returns tax and trial records and local government documents and wills They gathered data on all southerners Historian Vernon Burton described Owsley s Plain Folk of the Old South as one of the most influential works on southern history ever written 7 Plain Folk argued that southern society was not dominated by planter aristocrats but that yeoman farmers played a significant role in it The religion language and culture of these common people created a democratic plain folk society Critics say Owsley overemphasized the size of the southern landholding middle class while excluding the large class of poor whites who owned neither land nor slaves Owsley believed that shared economic interests united southern farmers critics suggest the vast difference in economic classes between the elite and subsistence farmers meant they did not have the same values or outlook 2 Recent scholarship edit In his study of Edgefield County South Carolina Orville Vernon Burton classified white society into the poor the yeoman middle class and the elite A clear line demarcated the elite but according to Burton the line between poor and yeoman was less distinct Stephanie McCurry argues that yeomen were clearly distinguished from poor whites by their ownership of land real property Yeomen were self working farmers distinct from the elite because they physically labored on their land alongside any slaves they owned Planters with numerous slaves had work that was essentially managerial and often they supervised an overseer rather than the slaves themselves 8 Wetherington 2005 argues the plain folk of Georgia supported secession to defend their families homes and notions of white liberty During the war the established patriarchy continued to control the home front and kept it functioning even though growing numbers of plain folk joined the new wartime poor Wetherington suggests that their localism and racism dovetailed with a republican ideology founded on Jeffersonian notions of an economically independent yeomanry sharing common interests 9 Plain folk during the war raised subsistence crops and vegetables and relied on a free and open range to hunt hogs Examples of these conditions can be seen in the award winning novel Cold Mountain Before the war they became more active in the cotton and slave markets but plain folk remained unwilling to jeopardize their self sufficiency and the stability of their neighborhoods for the economic interests of planters The soldiers had their own reasons for fighting First and foremost they sought to protect hearth and home from Yankee threats White supremacy and masculinity depended on slavery which Lincoln s Republicans threatened Plain folk concepts of masculinity explain why so many men enlisted they wanted to be worthy of the privileges of men including the affections of female patriots By March 1862 the piney woods region of Georgia had a 60 enlistment rate comparable to that found in planter areas 10 As the war dragged on hardship became a way of life Wetherington reports that enough men remained home to preserve the paternalistic social order but there were too few to prevent mounting deprivation Wartime shortages increased the economic divide between planters and yeoman farmers nevertheless some planters took seriously their paternalistic obligations by selling their corn to plain folk at the official Confederate rate out of a spirit of patriotism 11 Wetherington s argument weakens other scholars suggestions that class conflict led to Confederate defeat More damaging to Confederate nationalism was the growing localism that grew as areas had to fend for themselves as William Tecumseh Sherman s forces came nearer During Reconstruction Era after the war plain folk split Most supported the conservative or Democratic Party position but some were Scalawags who supported the Republican Party 12 See also editCulture of the Southern United States Jeffersonian democracy The Impending Crisis of the South an 1857 anti slavery critique by North Carolina writer Hinton Rowan Helper The National Grange of the Order of Patrons of Husbandry a farmers organization founded in 1867 and still in operation Sharecropping where the farmer does not own the land Yeoman the independent farmerReferences edit Carey 2001 a b Hyde 2005 Campbell 1987 Darden Asbury Pyron 1981 The Inner War of Southern History Southern Studies 20 1 5 19 Hyde 1997 Hundley 1860 Tommy W Rogers D R Hundley A Multi Class Thesis of Social Stratification in the Antebellum South Mississippi Quarterly 1970 23 2 135 154 Vernon O Burton Frank Lawrence Owsley in American National Biography Volume 16 ed by John Arthur Garraty 1985 Burton 1985 Wetherington 2005 p 12 Wetherington 2005 Wetherington 2005 p 171 Hahn 1983 Further reading editAsh S V 1991 Poor Whites in the Occupied South 1861 1865 The Journal of Southern History 57 1 39 62 doi 10 2307 2209873 JSTOR 2209873 Atack Jeremy The Agricultural Ladder Revisited A New Look at an Old Question with Some Data for 1860 Agricultural History Vol 63 No 1 Winter 1989 pp 1 25 in JSTOR Atack Jeremy Tenants and Yeomen in the Nineteenth Century Agricultural History Vol 62 No 3 Summer 1988 pp 6 32 in JSTOR Bolton Charles C Planters Plain Folk and Poor Whites in the Old South in Lacy K Ford ed A Companion to the Civil War and Reconstruction 2005 75 93 Bolton Charles C Poor Whites of the Antebellum South Tenants and Laborers in Central North Carolina and Northeast Mississippi Duke University Press 1994 Bruce Dickson D Jr And They All Sang Hallelujah Plain Folk Camp Meeting Religion 1800 1845 1974 Burton Orville Vernon In My Father s House Are Many Mansions Family and Community in Edgefield South Carolina 1985 Campbell Randolph B and Richard G Lowe Planters amp Plain Folk Agriculture in Antebellum Texas 1987 Campbell Randolph B Planters and Plain Folks The Social Structure of the Antebellum South in John B Boles and Evelyn Thomas Nolen eds Interpreting Southern History 1987 48 77 Campbell Randolph B and Richard G Lowe Wealth and Power in Antebellum Texas 1977 Carey Anthony Gene Frank L Owsley s Plain Folk of the Old South after Fifty Years in Glenn Feldman ed Reading Southern History Essays on Interpreters and Interpretations 2001 Cash Wilbur J The Mind of the South 1941 famous classic Flynt J Wayne Dixie s Forgotten People The South s Poor Whites 1979 deals with 20th century Cecil Fronsman Bill Common Whites Class and Culture in Antebellum North Carolina 1992 Delfino Susanna Michele Gillespie and Louis M Kyriakoudes eds Southern Society and Its Transformation U of Missouri Press 2011 248pp Scholarly essays on ante bellum working poor non slaveholding whites and small planters and other middling property holders Genovese Eugene D Yeomen Farmers in a Slaveholders Democracy Agricultural History Vol 49 No 2 Apr 1975 pp 331 342 in JSTOR Hahn Steven The Roots of Southern Populism Yeoman Farmers and the Transformation of the Georgia Upcountry 1850 1890 1983 Harris J William Plain Folk and Gentry in a Slave Society White Liberty and Black Slavery in Augusta s Hinterlands 1985 Hyde Samuel C Jr ed Plain Folk of the South Revisited 1997 Hyde Samuel C Jr 2005 Plain Folk Reconsidered Historiographical Ambiguity in Search of Definition Journal of Southern History 71 4 803 830 doi 10 2307 27648905 JSTOR 27648905 Hyde Samuel C Jr Plain Folk Yeomanry in the Antebellum South in John Boles Jr ed Companion to the American South 2004 pp 139 55 Hundley Daniel R Social Relations in Our Southern States 1860 reprint 1979 Linden Fabian Economic Democracy in the Slave South An Appraisal of Some Recent Views Journal of Negro History 31 April 1946 140 89 in JSTOR emphasizes statistical inequality Kwas Mary L Simon T Sanders and the Meredith Clan The Case for Kinship Studies Arkansas Historical Quarterly Oct 2006 250 273 Lowe Richard G and Randolph B Campbell Planters and Plain Folk Agriculture in Antebellum Texas 1987 Osthaus Carl R 2004 The Work Ethic of the Plain Folk Labor and Religion in the Old South Journal of Southern History 70 4 745 82 doi 10 2307 27648560 JSTOR 27648560 McCurry Stephanie Masters of Small Worlds Yeoman Households Gender Relations and the Political Culture of the Antebellum South Carolina Low Country 1995 McWhiney Grady In Cracker Culture Celtic Ways in the Old South 1988 Morgan Edmund S American Slavery American Freedom The Ordeal of Colonial Virginia 1975 Newby I A Plain Folk in the New South Social Change and Cultural Persistence 1880 1915 1989 concentrates on the poorest whites Osterhaus Carl R 2004 The Work Ethic of the Plain Folk Labor and Religion in the Old South Journal of Southern History 70 4 745 782 doi 10 2307 27648560 JSTOR 27648560 Otto John Solomon 1985 The Migration of the Southern Plain Folk An Interdisciplinary Synthesis Journal of Southern History 51 2 183 200 doi 10 2307 2208824 JSTOR 2208824 Otto John Solomon 1987 Plain Folk Lost Frontiersmen and Hillbillies The Southern Mountain Folk in History and Popular Culture Southern Studies 26 5 17 Otto John Solomon 1983 Southern Plain Folk Agriculture A Reconsideration Plantation Society in the Americas 2 1 29 36 Owsley Frank Lawrence Plain Folk of the Old South 1949 the classic study Owsley Frank Lawrence Owsley Harriet C 1940 The Economic Basis of Society in the Late Ante Bellum South Journal of Southern History 6 1 24 25 doi 10 2307 2191937 JSTOR 2191937 Rogers Tommy W 1970 D R Hundley A Multi Class Thesis of Social Stratification in the Antebellum South Mississippi Quarterly 23 2 135 154 Sarson Steven Yeoman Farmers in a Planters Republic Socioeconomic Conditions and Relations in Early National Prince George s County Maryland Journal of the Early Republic 29 Spring 2009 63 99 Schaefer Donald 1978 Yeomen Farmers and Economic Democracy A Study of Wealth and Economic Mobility in the Western Tobacco Region 1850 1860 Explorations in Economic History 15 4 421 437 doi 10 1016 0014 4983 78 90047 5 Sherrod Ricky L 2009 Plain Folk Planters and the Complexities of Southern Society Kinship Ties in Nineteenth Century Northwest Louisiana and Northeast Texas Southwestern Historical Quarterly 113 1 1 31 doi 10 1353 swh 2009 0056 S2CID 144029275 Wetherington Mark V Plain Folk s Fight The Civil War and Reconstruction in Piney Woods Georgia 2005 Wiley Bell I The Plain People of the Confederacy 1963 Wilkison Kyle G Yeomen Sharecroppers and Socialists Plain Folk Protest in Texas 1870 1914 2008 Winters Donald L 1987 Plain Folk of the Old South Reexamined Economic Democracy in Tennessee Journal of Southern History 53 4 565 586 doi 10 2307 2208775 JSTOR 2208775 Woodward C Vann Tom Watson Agrarian Rebel 1938 on Georgia leader 1890 1920 online edition Wright Gavin 1970 Economic Democracy and the Concentration of Agricultural Wealth in the Cotton South 1850 1860 Agricultural History 44 1 63 93 JSTOR 3741361 a statistical critique of Owsley Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Plain Folk of the Old South amp oldid 1151471233, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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