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Plantation complexes in the Southern United States

Plantation complexes were common on agricultural plantations in the Southern United States from the 17th into the 20th century. The complex included everything from the main residence down to the pens for livestock. Until the abolition of slavery, such plantations were generally self-sufficient settlements that relied on the forced labor of enslaved people.

Stratford Hall is a classic example of Southern plantation architecture, built on an H-plan and completed in 1738 near Lerty, Virginia.
The Seward Plantation is a historic Southern plantation-turned-ranch in Independence, Texas

Plantations are an important aspect of the history of the Southern United States, particularly before the American Civil War. The mild temperate climate, plentiful rainfall, and fertile soils of the Southeastern United States allowed the flourishing of large plantations, where large numbers of enslaved Africans or African Americans were held captive and forced to produce crops to create wealth for a white elite.[1]

Today, as was also true in the past, there is a wide range of opinion as to what differentiated a plantation from a farm. Typically, the focus of a farm was subsistence agriculture. In contrast, the primary focus of a plantation was the production of cash crops, with enough staple food crops produced to feed the population of the estate and the livestock.[2] A common definition of what constituted a plantation is that it typically had 500 to 1,000 acres (2.0 to 4.0 km2) or more of land and produced one or two cash crops for sale.[3] Other scholars have attempted to define it by the number of enslaved persons.[4]

The plantation complex edit

 
The whimsical Gothic Revival-style Afton Villa in St. Francisville, Louisiana. Built from 1848 to 1856, the masonry structure burned in 1963.

The vast majority of plantations did not have grand mansions centered on a huge acreage. These large estates did exist, but represented only a small percentage of the plantations that once existed in the South.[2] Although many Southern farmers did enslave people before emancipation in 1862, few enslaved more than five. These farmers tended to work the fields alongside the people they enslaved.[5] Of the estimated 46,200 plantations existing in 1860, 20,700 had 20 to 30 enslaved people and 2,300 had a workforce of a hundred or more, with the rest somewhere in between.[4]

Many plantations were operated by absentee-landowners and never had a main house on site. Just as vital and arguably more important to the complex were the many structures built for the processing and storage of crops, food preparation and storage, sheltering equipment and animals, and various other domestic and agricultural purposes. The value of the plantation came from its land and the enslaved people who toiled on it to produce crops for sale. These same people produced the built environment: the main house for the plantation owner, the slave cabins, barns, and other structures of the complex.[6]

 
1862 photograph of the slave quarter at Smiths Plantation in Port Royal, South Carolina. The slave house shown is of the saddlebag type.

The materials for a plantation's buildings, for the most part, came from the lands of the estate. Lumber was obtained from the forested areas of the property.[6] Depending on its intended use, it was either split, hewn, or sawn.[7] Bricks were most often produced onsite from sand and clay that was molded, dried, and then fired in a kiln. If a suitable stone was available, it was used. Tabby was often used on the southern Sea Islands.[6]

 
Freeman Plantation House in Jefferson, Texas

Few plantation structures have survived into the modern era, with the vast majority destroyed through natural disaster, neglect, or fire over the centuries. With the collapse of the plantation economy and subsequent Southern transition from a largely agrarian to an industrial society, plantations and their building complexes became obsolete. Although the majority have been destroyed, the most common structures to have survived are the plantation houses. As is true of buildings in general, the more substantially built and architecturally interesting buildings have tended to be the ones that survived into the modern age and are better documented than many of the smaller and simpler ones. Several plantation homes of important persons, including Mount Vernon, Monticello, and The Hermitage have also been preserved. Less common are intact examples of slave housing. The rarest survivors of all are the agricultural and lesser domestic structures, especially those dating from the pre-Civil War era.[6][8]

Slave quarters edit

 
1870s photo of the brick slave quarters at Hermitage Plantation (now destroyed) near Savannah, Georgia

Housing for enslaved people, although once one of the most common and distinctive features of the plantation landscape, has largely disappeared in much of the South. Many of the structures were insubstantial to begin with.[9] Only the better-built examples tended to survive, and then usually only if they were put to other uses after emancipation. The quarters could be next to the main house, well away from it, or both. On large plantations they were often arranged in a village-like grouping along an avenue away from the main house, but sometimes were scattered around the plantation on the edges of the fields where the enslaved people toiled, like most of the sharecropper cabins that were to come later.[10]

 
Slave house with a sugar kettle in the foreground at Woodland Plantation in West Pointe a la Hache, Louisiana

Houses for enslaved people were often of the most basic construction. Meant for little more than sleeping, they were usually rough log or frame one-room cabins; early examples often had chimneys made of clay and sticks.[9][11] Hall and parlor houses (two rooms) were also represented on the plantation landscape, offering a separate room for eating and sleeping. Sometimes dormitories and two-story dwellings were also used to house enslaved people. Earlier examples rested on the ground with a dirt floor, but later examples were usually raised on piers for ventilation. Most of these represent the dwellings constructed for enslaved people who worked in the fields. Rarely though, such as at the former Hermitage Plantation in Georgia and Boone Hall in South Carolina, even those who worked in the fields were provided with brick cabins.[12]

More fortunate in their accommodations were those who served in the enslavers' houses or were skilled laborers. They usually resided either in a part of the main house or in their own houses, which were normally more comfortable dwellings than those of their counterparts who worked in the fields.[11][12] A few enslavers went further in providing housing for the household servants. When Waldwic in Alabama was remodeled in the Gothic Revival style in the 1852, the enslaved people serving the household were provided with larger accommodations that matched the architecture of the main house. This model, however, was exceedingly rare.[8]

 
Remnants of the slave quarter at Faunsdale Plantation near Faunsdale, Alabama

Famous landscape designer Frederick Law Olmsted had this recollection of a visit to plantations along the Georgia coast in 1855:

In the afternoon, I left the main road, and, towards night, reached a much more cultivated district. The forest of pines extended uninterruptedly on one side of the way, but on the other was a continued succession of very large fields, or rich dark soil – evidently reclaimed swamp-land – which had been cultivated the previous year, in Sea Island cotton, or maize. Beyond them, a flat surface of still lower land, with a silver thread of water curling through it, extended, Holland-like, to the horizon. Usually at as great a distance as a quarter of a mile from the road, and from a half mile to a mile apart, were the residences of the planters – large white houses, with groves of evergreen trees about them; and between these and the road were little villages of slave-cabins ... The cottages were framed buildings, boarded on the outside, with shingle roofs and brick chimneys; they stood fifty feet apart, with gardens and pig-yards ... At the head of the settlement, in a garden looking down the street, was an overseer's house, and here the road divided, running each way at right angles; on one side to barns and a landing on the river, on the other toward the mansion ...

— Frederick Law Olmsted, A Journey in the Seaboard Slave States[13]

Other residential structures edit

 
Overseer's house at Oakland Plantation near Natchitoches, Louisiana

A crucial residential structure on larger plantations was an overseer's house. The overseer was largely responsible for the success or failure of an estate, making sure that quotas were met and sometimes meting out punishment for infractions by the enslaved. The overseer was responsible for healthcare, with enslaved people and slave houses inspected routinely. He was also the record keeper of most crop inventories and held the keys to various storehouses.[14]

 
A garçonnière (bachelor's quarters) at The Houmas, near Burnside, Louisiana

The overseer's house was usually a modest dwelling, not far from the cabins of the enslaved workers. The overseer and his family, even when white and southern, did not freely mingle with the planter and his family. They were in a different social stratum than that of the owner and were expected to know their place. In village-type slave quarters on plantations with overseers, his house was usually at the head of the slave village rather than near the main house, at least partially due to his social position. It was also part of an effort to keep the enslaved people compliant and prevent the beginnings of a slave rebellion, a very real fear in the minds of most plantation owners.[14]

Economic studies indicate that fewer than 30 percent of planters employed white supervisors for their slave labor.[15] Some planters appointed a trusted slave as the overseer, and in Louisiana free black overseers were also used.[14]

Another residential structure largely unique to plantation complexes was the garconnière or bachelors' quarters. Mostly built by Louisiana Creole people, but occasionally found in other parts of the Deep South formerly under the dominion of New France, they were structures that housed the adolescent or unmarried sons of plantation owners. At some plantations it was a free-standing structure and at others it was attached to the main house by side-wings. It developed from the Acadian tradition of using the loft of the house as a bedroom for young men.[16]

Kitchen yard edit

 
The detached brick kitchen building at the former Lowry Plantation outside of Marion, Alabama. The main house is wood-frame with brick columns and piers.

A variety of domestic and lesser agricultural structures surrounded the main house on all plantations. Most plantations possessed some, if not all, of these outbuildings, often called dependencies, commonly arranged around a courtyard to the rear of the main house known as the kitchen yard. They included a cookhouse (separate kitchen building), pantry, washhouse (laundry), smokehouse, chicken house, spring house or ice house, milkhouse (dairy), covered well, and cistern. The privies would have been located some distance away from the plantation house and kitchen yard.[17]

The cookhouse or kitchen was almost always in a separate building in the South until modern times, sometimes connected to the main house by a covered walkway. This separation was partially due to the cooking fire generating heat all day long in an already hot and humid climate. It also reduced the risk of fire. Indeed, on many plantations the cookhouse was built of brick while when the main house was of wood-frame construction. Another reason for the separation was to prevent the noise and smells of cooking activities from reaching the main house. Sometimes the cookhouse contained two rooms, one for the actual kitchen and the other to serve as the residence for the cook. Still other arrangements had the kitchen in one room, a laundry in the other, and a second story for servant quarters.[8][17] The pantry could be in its own structure or in a cool part of the cookhouse or a storehouse and would have secured items such as barrels of salt, sugar, flour, cornmeal and the like.[18]

 
1940 photograph of the washhouse (laundry) at Melrose Plantation in Melrose, Louisiana

The washhouse is where clothes, tablecloths, and bed-covers were cleaned and ironed. It also sometimes had living quarters for the laundrywoman. Cleaning laundry in this period was labor-intensive for the domestic slaves that performed it. It required various gadgets to accomplish the task. The wash boiler was a cast iron or copper cauldron in which clothes or other fabrics and soapy water were heated over an open fire. The wash-stick was a wooden stick with a handle at its uppermost part and four to five prongs at its base. It was simultaneously pounded up and down and rotated in the washing tub to aerate the wash solution and loosen any dirt. The items would then be vigorously rubbed on a corrugated wash board until clean. By the 1850s, they would have been passed through a mangle. Prior to that time, wringing out the items was done by hand. The items would then be ready to be hung out to dry or, in inclement weather, placed on a drying rack. Ironing would have been done with a metal flat iron, often heated in the fireplace, and various other devices.[19]

 
Smokehouse at Wheatlands near Sevierville, Tennessee

The milkhouse would have been used by enslaved people to make milk into cream, butter, and buttermilk. The process started with separating the milk into skim milk and cream. It was done by pouring the whole milk into a container and allowing the cream to naturally rise to the top. This was collected into another container daily until several gallons had accumulated. During this time the cream would sour slightly through naturally occurring bacteria. This increased the efficiency of the churning to come. Churning was an arduous task performed with a butter churn. Once firm enough to separate out, but soft enough to stick together, the butter was taken out of the churn, washed in very cold water, and salted. The churning process also produced buttermilk as a by-product. It was the remaining liquid after the butter was removed from the churn.[20] All of the products of this process would have been stored in the spring house or ice house.[17]

 
1937 photograph of one of two identical pigeonniers at Uncle Sam Plantation in Convent, Louisiana. One of the most ornate and complete plantation complexes left at that time, it was bulldozed in 1940 for levee construction.

The smokehouse was utilized to preserve meat, usually pork, beef, and mutton. It was commonly built of hewn logs or brick. Following the slaughter in the fall or early winter, salt and sugar were applied to the meat at the beginning of the curing process, and then the meat was slowly dried and smoked in the smokehouse by a fire that did not add any heat to the smokehouse itself.[21] If it was cool enough, the meat could also be stored there until it was consumed.[17]

The chicken house was a building where chickens were kept. Its design could vary, depending on whether the chickens were kept for egg production, meat, or both. If for eggs, there were often nest boxes for egg laying and perches on which the birds to sleep. Eggs were collected daily.[17] Some plantations also had pigeonniers (dovecotes) that, in Louisiana, sometimes took the form of monumental towers set near the main house. The pigeons were raised to be eaten as a delicacy and their droppings were used as fertilizer.[22]

Few functions could take place on a plantation without a reliable water supply. Every plantation had at least one, and sometimes several, wells. These were usually roofed and often partially enclosed by latticework to exclude animals. Since the well water in many areas was distasteful due to mineral content, the potable water on many plantations came from cisterns that were supplied with rainwater by a pipe from a rooftop catchment. These could be huge aboveground wooden barrels capped by metal domes, such as was often seen in Louisiana and coastal areas of Mississippi, or underground brick masonry domes or vaults, common in other areas.[8][23]

Ancillary structures edit

 
Schoolhouse for the owner's children at Thornhill near Forkland, Alabama

Some structures on plantations provided subsidiary functions; again, the term dependency can be applied to these buildings. A few were common, such as the carriage house and blacksmith shop; but most varied widely among plantations and were largely a function of what the planter wanted, needed, or could afford to add to the complex. These buildings might include schoolhouses, offices, churches, commissary stores, gristmills, and sawmills.[8][24]

Found on some plantations in every Southern state, plantation schoolhouses served as a place for the hired tutor or governess to educate the planter's children, and sometimes even those of other planters in the area.[8] On most plantations, however, a room in the main house was sufficient for schooling, rather than a separate dedicated building. Paper was precious, so the children often recited their lessons until they memorized them. The usual texts in the beginning were the Bible, a primer, and a hornbook. As the children grew older their schooling began to prepare them for their adult roles on the plantation. Boys studied academic subjects, proper social etiquette, and plantation management, while girls learned art, music, French, and the domestic skills suited to the mistress of a plantation.[25]

 
Plantation office at Waverley near West Point, Mississippi

Most plantation owners maintained an office for keeping records, transacting business, writing correspondence, and the like.[8] Although it, like the schoolroom, was most often within the main house or another structure, it was not at all rare for a complex to have a separate plantation office. John C. Calhoun used his plantation office at his Fort Hill plantation in Clemson, South Carolina as a private sanctuary of sorts, with it utilized as both study and library during his twenty-five year residency.[26]

 
The "Negro Baptist Church" at Friendfield Plantation near Georgetown, South Carolina

Another structure found on some estates was a plantation chapel or church. These were built for a variety of reasons. In many cases the planter built a church or chapel for the use of the plantation slaves, although they usually recruited a white minister to conduct the services.[27] Some were built to exclusively serve the plantation family, but many more were built to serve the family and others in the area who shared the same faith. This seems to be especially true with planters within the Episcopal denomination. Early records indicate that at Faunsdale Plantation the mistress of the estate, Louisa Harrison, gave regular instruction to her slaves by reading the services of the church and teaching the Episcopal catechism to their children. Following the death of her first husband, she had a large Carpenter Gothic church built, St. Michael's Church. She latter remarried to Rev. William A. Stickney, who served as the Episcopal minister of St. Michael's and was later appointed by Bishop Richard Wilmer as a "Missionary to the Negroes," after which Louisa joined him as an unofficial fellow minister among the African Americans of the Black Belt.[28]

 
The Chapel of the Cross at Annandale Plantation near Madison, Mississippi

Most plantation churches were of wood-frame construction, although some were built in brick, often stuccoed. Early examples tended towards the vernacular or neoclassicism, but later examples were almost always in the Gothic Revival style. A few rivaled those built by southern town congregations. Two of the most elaborate extant examples in the Deep South are the Chapel of the Cross at Annandale Plantation and St. Mary's Chapel at Laurel Hill Plantation, both Episcopalian structures in Mississippi. In both cases the original plantation houses have been destroyed, but the quality and design of the churches can give some insight into how elaborate some plantation complexes and their buildings could be. St. Mary Chapel, in Natchez, dates to 1839, built in stuccoed brick with large Gothic and Tudor arch windows, hood mouldings over the doors and windows, buttresses, a crenelated roof-line, and a small Gothic spire crowning the whole.[29] Although construction records are very sketchy, the Chapel of the Cross, built from 1850 to 1852 near Madison, may be attributable to Frank Wills or Richard Upjohn, both of whom designed almost identical churches in the North during the same time period that the Chapel of the Cross was built.[30][31]

 
Plantation store at Oakland Plantation near Natchitoches, Louisiana

Another secondary structure on many plantations during the height of the sharecropping-era was the plantation store or commissary. Although some prewar plantations had a commissary that distributed food and supplies to enslaved people, the plantation store was essentially a postwar addition to the plantation complex. In addition to the share of their crop already owed to the plantation owner for the use of his or her land, tenants and sharecroppers purchased, usually on credit against their next crop, the food staples and equipment that they relied on for their existence.[8][32]

This type of debt bondage, for blacks and poor whites, led to a populist movement in the late 19th century that began to bring blacks and whites together for a common cause. This early populist movement is largely credited with helping to cause state governments in the South, mostly controlled by the planter elite, to enact various laws that disenfranchised poor whites and blacks, through grandfather clauses, literacy tests, poll taxes, and various other laws.[32]

Agricultural structures edit

 
Carriage house (left) and stable (right) at Melrose in Natchez, Mississippi

The agricultural structures on plantations had some basic structures in common and others that varied widely. They depended on what crops and animals were raised on the plantation. Common crops included corn, upland cotton, sea island cotton, rice, sugarcane, and tobacco. Besides those mentioned earlier, cattle, ducks, goats, hogs, and sheep were raised for their derived products and/or meat. All estates would have possessed various types of animal pens, stables, and a variety of barns. Many plantations utilized a number of specialized structures that were crop-specific and only found on that type of plantation.[33]

Plantation barns can be classified by function, depending on what type of crop and livestock were raised.[34] In the upper South, like their counterparts in the North, barns had to provide basic shelter for the animals and storage of fodder. Unlike the upper regions, most plantations in the lower South did not have to provide substantial shelter to their animals during the winter. Animals were often kept in fattening pens with a simple shed for shelter, with the main barn or barns being utilized for crop storage or processing only.[33] Stables were an essential type of barn on the plantation, used to house both horses and mules. These were usually separate, one for each type of animal. The mule stable was the most important on the vast majority of estates, since the mules did most of the work, pulling the plows and carts.[33]

 
Tobacco barn near Lexington, Kentucky

Barns not involved in animal husbandry were most commonly the crib barn (corn cribs or other types of granaries), storage barns, or processing barns. Crib barns were typically built of unchinked logs, although they were sometimes covered with vertical wood siding. Storage barns often housed unprocessed crops or those awaiting consumption or transport to market. Processing barns were specialized structures that were necessary for helping to actually process the crop.[34]

Tobacco plantations were most common in certain parts of Georgia, Kentucky, Missouri, North Carolina, Tennessee, South Carolina, and Virginia. The first agricultural plantations in Virginia were founded on the growing of tobacco. Tobacco production on plantations was very labor-intensive. It required the entire year to gather seeds, start them growing in cold frames, and then transplant the plants to the fields once the soil had warmed. Then the enslaved people had to weed the fields all summer and remove the flowers from the tobacco plants in order to force more energy into the leaves. Harvesting was done by plucking individual leaves over several weeks as they ripened, or cutting entire tobacco plants and hanging them in vented tobacco barns to dry, called curing.[35][36]

 
Winnowing barn (foreground) and rice pounding mill (background) at Mansfield Plantation near Georgetown, South Carolina

Rice plantations were common in the South Carolina Lowcountry. Until the 19th century, rice was threshed from the stalks and the husk was pounded from the grain by hand, a very labor-intensive endeavor. Steam-powered rice pounding mills had become common by the 1830s. They were used to thresh the grain from the inedible chaff. A separate chimney, required for the fires powering the steam engine, was adjacent to the pounding mill and often connected by an underground system. The winnowing barn, a building raised roughly a story off of the ground on posts, was used to separate the lighter chaff and dust from the rice.[37][38]

 
Ruins of a sugar mill at Laurel Valley Plantation in Thibodaux, Louisiana

Sugar plantations were most commonly found in Louisiana. In fact, Louisiana produced almost all of the sugar grown in the United States during the prewar period. From one-quarter to one-half of all sugar consumed in the United States came from Louisiana sugar plantations. Plantations grew sugarcane from Louisiana's colonial era onward, but large scale production did not begin until the 1810s and 1820s. A successful sugar plantation required a skilled retinue of hired labor and enslaved people.[39]

The most specialized structure on a sugar plantation was the sugar mill (sugar house), where, by the 1830s, the steam-powered mill crushed the sugarcane stalks between rollers. This squeezed the juice from the stalks and the cane juice would run out the bottom of the mill through a strainer to be collected into a tank. From there the juice went through a process that removed impurities from the liquid and thickened it through evaporation. It was steam-heated in vats where additional impurities were removed by adding lime to the syrup and then the mixture was strained. At this point the liquid had been transformed into molasses. It was then placed into a closed vessel known as a vacuum pan, where it was boiled until the sugar in the syrup was crystallized. The crystallized sugar was then cooled and separated from any remaining molasses in a process known as purging. The final step was packing the sugar into hogshead barrels for transport to market.[40]

 
Cotton press from the Norfleet Plantation, now relocated to Tarboro, North Carolina

Cotton plantations, the most common type of plantation in the South prior to the Civil War, were the last type of plantation to fully develop. Cotton production was a very labor-intensive crop to harvest, with the fibers having to be hand-picked from the bolls. This was coupled with the equally laborious removal of seeds from fiber by hand.[41]

Following the invention of the cotton gin, cotton plantations sprang up all over the South and cotton production soared, along with the expansion of slavery. Cotton also caused plantations to grow in size. During the financial panics of 1819 and 1837, when demand by British mills for cotton dropped, many small planters went bankrupt and their land and slaves were bought by larger plantations. As cotton-producing estates grew in size, so did the number of slaveholders and the average number of enslaved people held.[42][41]

A cotton plantation normally had a cotton gin house, where the cotton gin was used to remove the seeds from raw cotton. After ginning, the cotton had to be baled before it could be warehoused and transported to market. This was accomplished with a cotton press, an early type of baler that was usually powered by two mules walking in a circle with each attached to an overhead arm that turned a huge wooden screw. The downward action of this screw compressed the processed cotton into a uniform bale-shaped wooden enclosure, where the bale was secured with twine.[43]

Plantation complexes in the 21st century edit

 
Monticello, located outside Charlottesville, Virginia, was the primary plantation house of Thomas Jefferson

Many manor houses survive, and in some cases former slave dwellings have been rebuilt or renovated. To pay for the upkeep, some, like the Monmouth Plantation in Natchez, Mississippi and the Lipscomb Plantation in Durham, North Carolina, have become small luxury hotels or bed and breakfasts. Not only Monticello and Mount Vernon but some 375 former plantation houses are museums that can be visited. There are examples in every Southern state. Centers of plantation life such as Natchez run plantation tours. Traditionally the museum houses presented an idyllic, dignified "lost cause" vision of the antebellum South. Recently, and to different degrees, some have begun to acknowledge the "horrors of slavery" which made that life possible.[44]

In late 2019, after contact initiated by Color of Change, "five major websites often used for wedding planning have pledged to cut back on promoting and romanticizing weddings at former slave plantations". The New York Times, earlier in 2019, "decided...to exclude couples who were being married on plantations from wedding announcements and other wedding coverage".[45]

Social and labor organization edit

Plantation owner edit

 
Three planters, after 1845, The Metropolitan Museum of Art
 
The Old Plantation: How We Lived in Great House and Cabin before the War, 1901, by Confederate chaplain and planter James Battle Avirett

An individual who owned a plantation was known as a planter. Historians of the prewar South have generally defined "planter" most precisely as a person owning property (real estate) and keeping 20 or more people enslaved.[46] In the "Black Belt" counties of Alabama and Mississippi, the terms "planter" and "farmer" were often synonymous.[47]

The historians Robert Fogel and Stanley Engerman define large planters as those who enslaved over 50 people, and medium planters as those who enslaved between 16 and 50 people.[48] Historian David Williams, in A People's History of the Civil War: Struggles for the Meaning of Freedom, suggests that the minimum requirement for planter status was twenty people enslaved, especially since a Southern planter could exempt Confederate duty for one white male per twenty people owned.[49] In his study of Black Belt counties in Alabama, Jonathan Weiner defines planters by ownership of real property, rather than of slaves. A planter, for Weiner, owned at least $10,000 worth of real estate in 1850 and $32,000 worth in 1860, equivalent to about the top eight percent of landowners.[50] In his study of southwest Georgia, Lee Formwalt defines planters in terms of size of land holdings rather than in terms of numbers of people enslaved. Formwalt's planters are in the top 4.5% of landowners, translating into real estate worth $6,000 or more in 1850, $24,000 or more in 1860, and $11,000 or more in 1870.[51] In his study of Harrison County, Texas, Randolph B. Campbell classifies large planters as owners of 20 people, and small planters as owners of between 10 and 19 people.[52] In Chicot and Phillips Counties, Arkansas, Carl H. Moneyhon defines large planters as owners of 20 or more people, and of 600 acres (240 ha) or more.[53]

Many nostalgic memoirs about plantation life were published in the postwar South.[54] For example, James Battle Avirett, who grew up on the Avirett-Stephens Plantation in Onslow County, North Carolina, and served as an Episcopal chaplain in the Confederate States Army, published The Old Plantation: How We Lived in Great House and Cabin before the War in 1901.[54] Such memoirs often included descriptions of Christmas as the epitome of anti-modern order exemplified by the "great house" and extended family.[55]

Novels, often adapted into films, presented a romantic, sanitized view of plantation life and ignored or glorified white supremacy. The most popular of these were The Birth of a Nation (1916), based on Thomas Dixon Jr.,'s best-selling novel The Clansman (1905), and Gone with the Wind (1939), based on the best-selling novel of the same name (1936) by Margaret Mitchell.

Overseer edit

 
An overseer on horseback observes the enslaved people picking cotton, c. 1850

On larger plantations an overseer represented the planter in matters of daily management. Usually perceived as uncouth, ill-educated, and low-class, he had the often despised task of meting out punishments in order to keep up discipline and secure the profit of his employer.[56][better source needed]

Enslaved people edit

Southern plantations depended upon slaves to do the agricultural work. "Honestly, 'plantation' and 'slavery' is one and the same," said an employee of the Whitney Plantation in 2019.[57]

"Many plantations, including George Washington's Mount Vernon and Thomas Jefferson's Monticello, are working to present a more accurate image of what life was like for slaves and slave owners."[58] "The changes have begun to draw people long alienated by the sites' whitewashing of the past and to satisfy what staff call a hunger for real history, as plantations add slavery-focused tours, rebuild cabins and reconstruct the lives of the enslaved with help from their descendants."[57]

McLeod Plantation focuses primarily on slavery. "McLeod focuses on bondage, talking bluntly about 'slave labor camps' and shunning the big white house for the fields."[57] "'I was depressed by the time I left and questioned why anyone would want to live in South Carolina,' read one review [of a tour] posted to Twitter."[58]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Guelzo, Allen C. (2012). Fateful Lightning: A New History of the Civil War and Reconstruction. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 33–36. ISBN 978-0-19-984328-2.
  2. ^ a b Phillips, Ulrich Bonnell (1929). Life and Labor in the Old South. Boston: Little, Brown, and Company. p. 338. ISBN 978-0-316-70607-0.
  3. ^ Robert J. Vejnar II (November 6, 2008). "Plantation Agriculture". The Encyclopedia of Alabama. Auburn University. Retrieved April 15, 2011.
  4. ^ a b Vlach, John Michael (1993). Back of the Big House, The Architecture of Plantation Slavery. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. p. 8. ISBN 978-0-8078-4412-0.
  5. ^ McNeilly, Donald P. (2000). Old South Frontier: Cotton Plantations and the Formation of Arkansas Society. Fayetteville: University of Arkansas Press. p. 129. ISBN 978-1557286192. Retrieved August 17, 2017.
  6. ^ a b c d Matrana, Marc R. (2009). Lost Plantations of the South. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi. pp. xi–xv. ISBN 978-1-57806-942-2.
  7. ^ Edwards, Jay Dearborn; Nicolas Kariouk Pecquet du Bellay de Verton (2004). A Creole lexicon: Architecture, Landscape, People. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. pp. 153–157. ISBN 978-0-8071-2764-3.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h Robert Gamble (September 2, 2008). "Plantation Architecture in Alabama". The Encyclopedia of Alabama. Auburn University. Retrieved April 15, 2011.
  9. ^ a b Thomas E. Davidson. "The Evolution of the Slave Quarter in Tidewater Virginia". Jamestown Settlement and Yorktown Victory Center. Jamestown-Yorktown Foundation. Retrieved April 15, 2011.
  10. ^ Vlach, John Michael (1993). Back of the Big House, The Architecture of Plantation Slavery. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. pp. 10, 12, 192. ISBN 978-0-8078-4412-0.
  11. ^ a b Mark Watson. . Slave Housing in Montgomery County. Montgomery County Historical Society. Archived from the original on November 25, 2010. Retrieved April 15, 2011.
  12. ^ a b Vlach, John Michael (1993). Back of the Big House, The Architecture of Plantation Slavery. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. pp. 155–159. ISBN 978-0-8078-4412-0.
  13. ^ Olmsted, Frederick Law (1968). A Journey in the Seaboard Slave States. New York: Negro University Press. pp. 416–417.
  14. ^ a b c (PDF). Rural Life Museum. Louisiana State University. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 27, 2011. Retrieved April 15, 2011.
  15. ^ Catherine Clinton. "The Southern Plantation". Macmillan Information Now Encyclopedia. Civil War Potpourri. Retrieved April 15, 2011.
  16. ^ Edwards, Jay Dearborn; Nicolas Kariouk Pecquet du Bellay de Verton (2004). A Creole lexicon: Architecture, Landscape, People. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. p. 107. ISBN 978-0-8071-2764-3.
  17. ^ a b c d e Mary, Gunderson (2000). Southern Plantation Cooking. Mankato, Minn: Blue Earth Books. p. 10. ISBN 978-0-7368-0357-1.
  18. ^ Pond, Catherine Seiberling (2007). The Pantry: Its History and Modern Uses. Layton, Utah: Gibbs Smith. p. 23. ISBN 978-1-4236-0004-6.
  19. ^ Gaeta Bell. (PDF). East Bay Regional Park District. Archived from the original (PDF) on April 11, 2011. Retrieved April 15, 2011.
  20. ^ David B. Fankhauser. . University of Cincinnati Clermont College. Archived from the original on August 28, 2007. Retrieved April 15, 2011.
  21. ^ Judith Quinn. "Mechanics and Functions of a Smokehouse" (PDF). University of Delaware Library. Retrieved April 15, 2011.[dead link]
  22. ^ "French Creole Architecture". Louisiana Division of Historic Preservation. National Park Service. Retrieved April 15, 2011.
  23. ^ Rodriguez, Junius P. (2007). Slavery in the United States: A social, political, and historical encyclopedia, Volume 2. Santa Barbara, Calif: ABC-CLIO. p. 671. ISBN 978-1-85109-544-5.
  24. ^ Roberts, Bruce; Elizabeth Kedash (1990). Plantation homes of the James River. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. pp. 4–6. ISBN 978-0-8078-4278-2.
  25. ^ . Stratford Hall Plantation. Robert E. Lee Memorial Association, Inc., Stratford Hall. Archived from the original on September 26, 2011. Retrieved April 15, 2011.
  26. ^ "Fort Hill Plantation Office". South Carolina Historical Society. The Historical Marker Database. Retrieved April 15, 2011.
  27. ^ Diana J. Kleiner. "Waldeck Plantation". Texas State Historical Association. Retrieved April 15, 2011.
  28. ^ "Faunsdale Plantation Papers, 1805-1975" (PDF). Department of Archives and Manuscripts. Birmingham Public Library. Retrieved April 15, 2011.
  29. ^ "St. Mary Chapel, located on Laurel Hill Plantation in Adams County, approximately eight (8) miles south of Natchez. This property was an English land grant to the Richard Ellis family and continues to be owned by his descendants. {Note that there is also a Laurel Hill Plantation in Jefferson County that was owned by the Rush Nutt family}". St. Mary Basilica Archives. Episcopal Diocese of Jackson: St. Mary Basilica Archives. Retrieved April 15, 2011.
  30. ^ . Chapel of the Cross. Archived from the original on June 13, 2010. Retrieved April 15, 2011.
  31. ^ . Mississippi Department of Archives and History. Archived from the original on February 25, 2012. Retrieved April 15, 2011.
  32. ^ a b Whayne, Jeannie M. (1990). A New Plantation South: Land, Labor, and Federal Favor in Twentieth-century Arkansas. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press. pp. 55–57. ISBN 978-0-8139-1655-2.
  33. ^ a b c Poesch, Jessie J.; Barbara SoRelle Bacot (1997). Louisiana Buildings, 1720-1940: The Historic American Buildings Survey. Baton Rouge: LSU Press. pp. 157–165. ISBN 978-0-8071-2054-5.
  34. ^ a b . National Park Service. Archived from the original on February 19, 2011. Retrieved April 15, 2011.
  35. ^ Hart, John Fraser; Mather, Eugene Cotton (September 1961). "The Character of Tobacco Barns and Their Role in the Tobacco Economy of the United States". Annals of the Association of American Geographers. 51 (3): 274–293. doi:10.1111/j.1467-8306.1961.tb00379.x.
  36. ^ "Tobacco and Staple Agriculture". Tobacco in Virginia. Virginia Places. Retrieved April 15, 2011.
  37. ^ "Georgetown County Rice Culture, c. 1750-c. 1910". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. Retrieved April 15, 2011.
  38. ^ Rob Martin. . Isle of Wight History Centre. Archived from the original on June 25, 2011. Retrieved April 15, 2011.
  39. ^ . The Cabildo: Two Centuries of Louisiana History. Louisiana State Museum. Archived from the original on May 26, 2011. Retrieved April 16, 2011.
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  41. ^ a b Jean M. West. . Encyclopedia of Slavery in America. Archived from the original on September 3, 2011. Retrieved April 16, 2011.
  42. ^ Sellers, James Benson (1950). Slavery in Alabama. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press. pp. 19–43. ISBN 0-8173-0594-7.
  43. ^ "The Cotton Press". Africans in America. Public Broadcasting Service. Retrieved April 15, 2011.
  44. ^ Holpuch, Amanda (August 15, 2019). "Do idyllic southern plantations really tell the story of slavery?". The Guardian.
  45. ^ Murphy, Heather (December 5, 2019). "Pinterest and The Knot Pledge to Stop Promoting Plantation Weddings". New York Times.
  46. ^ Peter Kolchin, American Slavery 1619–1877, New York: Hill and Wang, 1993, xiii
  47. ^ Oakes, Ruling Race, 52.
  48. ^ Fogel, Robert William; Engerman, Stanley L. (1974). Time on the Cross: The Economics of American Negro Slavery. Boston: Little, Brown. ISBN 9780316287005. OCLC 311437227.
  49. ^ David Williams, A People's History of the Civil War: Struggles for the Meaning of Freedom, New York: The New Press, 2005.
  50. ^ Wiener, Jonathan M. (Autumn 1976). "Planter Persistence and Social Change: Alabama, 1850–1870". Journal of Interdisciplinary History. 7 (2): 235–60. doi:10.2307/202735. JSTOR 202735.
  51. ^ Formwalt, Lee W. (October 1981). "Antebellum Planter Persistence: Southwest Georgia—A Case Study". Plantation Society in the Americas. 1 (3): 410–29. ISSN 0192-5059. OCLC 571605035.
  52. ^ Campbell, Randolph B (May 1982). "Population Persistence and Social Change in Nineteenth-Century Texas: Harrison County, 1850–1880". Journal of Southern History. 48 (2): 185–204. doi:10.2307/2207106. JSTOR 2207106.
  53. ^ Moneyhon, Carl H. (1992). "The Impact of the Civil War in Arkansas: The Mississippi River Plantation Counties". Arkansas Historical Quarterly. 51 (2): 105–18. doi:10.2307/40025847. JSTOR 40025847.
  54. ^ a b Anderson, David (February 2005). "Down Memory Lane: Nostalgia for the Old South in Post-Civil War Plantation Reminiscences". The Journal of Southern History. 71 (1): 105–136. JSTOR 27648653.
  55. ^ Anderson, David J. (Fall 2014). "Nostalgia for Christmas in Postbellum Plantation Reminiscences". Southern Studies. 21 (2): 39–73.
  56. ^ Richter, William L. (August 20, 2009). "Overseers". The A to Z of the Old South. The A to Z Guide Series. Vol. 51. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press (published 2009). p. 258. ISBN 9780810870000. Retrieved November 29, 2016. On larger plantations, the planter's direct representative in day-to-day management of the crops, care of the land, livestock, farm implements, and slaves was the white overseer. It was his job to work the labor force to produce a profitable crop. He was an indispensable cog in the plantation machinery. [...] The overseer has usually been portrayed as an uncouth, uneducated character of low class whose main purpose was to harass the slaves and get in the way of the planter's progressive goals of production. More than that, the overseer had a position between master and slave in which it was hard to win. Directing slave labor was looked down upon by a large number of people, North and South. He was faced with planter demands that were at times unreasonable. He was forbidden to fraternize with the slaves. He had no chance of advancement unless he left the profession. He was bombarded with incessant complaints from masters, who did not appreciate the task he faced, and slaves, who sought to play off master and overseer against each other to avoid work and gain privileges. [...] The very nature of the job was difficult. The overseer had to care for the slaves and gain the largest crop possible. These were often contradictory goals.
  57. ^ a b c Knowles, Hannah (September 8, 2019). "As plantations talk more honestly about slavery, some visitors are pushing back". Washington Post.
  58. ^ a b Brockell, Gillian (August 8, 2019). "Some white people don't want to hear about slavery at plantations built by slaves". Washington Post.

Further reading edit

  • Blassingame, John W. The Slave Community: Plantation Life in the Antebellum South (1979)
  • * Evans, Chris, "The Plantation Hoe: The Rise and Fall of an Atlantic Commodity, 1650–1850," William and Mary Quarterly, (2012) 69#1 pp 71–100.
  • Phillips, Ulrich B. American Negro Slavery; a Survey of the Supply, Employment, and Control of Negro Labor, as Determined by the Plantation Regime. (1918; reprint 1966)online at Project Gutenberg; google edition
  • Phillips, Ulrich B. Life and Labor in the Old South. (1929). excerpts and text search
  • Phillips, Ulrich B. Phillips, Ulrich B. (1905). "The Economic Cost of Slaveholding in the Cotton Belt". Political Science Quarterly. 20 (2): 257–275. doi:10.2307/2140400. hdl:2027/hvd.32044082042185. JSTOR 2140400.
  • Silkenat, David. Scars on the Land: An Environmental History of Slavery in the American South. New York: Oxford University Press, 2022.
  • Thompson, Edgar Tristram. The Plantation edited by Sidney Mintz and George Baca (University of South Carolina Press; 2011) 176 pages; 1933 dissertation
  • Weiner, Marli Frances. Mistresses and Slaves: Plantation Women in South Carolina, 1830-80 (1997)
  • White, Deborah G. Aren't I a Woman?: Female Slaves in the Plantation South (2nd ed. 1999) excerpt and text search
  • Smith, Julia Floyd (2017). Slavery and plantation growth in Antebellum Florida, 1821-1860 (PDF). University of Florida Press.
  • Phillips, Ulrich B., ed. Plantation and Frontier Documents, 1649–1863; Illustrative of Industrial History in the Colonial and Antebellum South: Collected from MSS. and Other Rare Sources. 2 Volumes. (1909). online edition
  • "The Plantation System in Southern Life. Short documentary". YouTube. 1950. Archived from the original on November 7, 2021. Retrieved February 1, 2020.

plantation, complexes, southern, united, states, plantation, complexes, were, common, agricultural, plantations, southern, united, states, from, 17th, into, 20th, century, complex, included, everything, from, main, residence, down, pens, livestock, until, abol. Plantation complexes were common on agricultural plantations in the Southern United States from the 17th into the 20th century The complex included everything from the main residence down to the pens for livestock Until the abolition of slavery such plantations were generally self sufficient settlements that relied on the forced labor of enslaved people Stratford Hall is a classic example of Southern plantation architecture built on an H plan and completed in 1738 near Lerty Virginia The Seward Plantation is a historic Southern plantation turned ranch in Independence TexasPlantations are an important aspect of the history of the Southern United States particularly before the American Civil War The mild temperate climate plentiful rainfall and fertile soils of the Southeastern United States allowed the flourishing of large plantations where large numbers of enslaved Africans or African Americans were held captive and forced to produce crops to create wealth for a white elite 1 Today as was also true in the past there is a wide range of opinion as to what differentiated a plantation from a farm Typically the focus of a farm was subsistence agriculture In contrast the primary focus of a plantation was the production of cash crops with enough staple food crops produced to feed the population of the estate and the livestock 2 A common definition of what constituted a plantation is that it typically had 500 to 1 000 acres 2 0 to 4 0 km2 or more of land and produced one or two cash crops for sale 3 Other scholars have attempted to define it by the number of enslaved persons 4 Contents 1 The plantation complex 1 1 Slave quarters 1 2 Other residential structures 1 3 Kitchen yard 1 4 Ancillary structures 1 5 Agricultural structures 2 Plantation complexes in the 21st century 3 Social and labor organization 3 1 Plantation owner 3 2 Overseer 3 3 Enslaved people 4 See also 5 References 6 Further readingThe plantation complex edit nbsp The whimsical Gothic Revival style Afton Villa in St Francisville Louisiana Built from 1848 to 1856 the masonry structure burned in 1963 The vast majority of plantations did not have grand mansions centered on a huge acreage These large estates did exist but represented only a small percentage of the plantations that once existed in the South 2 Although many Southern farmers did enslave people before emancipation in 1862 few enslaved more than five These farmers tended to work the fields alongside the people they enslaved 5 Of the estimated 46 200 plantations existing in 1860 20 700 had 20 to 30 enslaved people and 2 300 had a workforce of a hundred or more with the rest somewhere in between 4 Many plantations were operated by absentee landowners and never had a main house on site Just as vital and arguably more important to the complex were the many structures built for the processing and storage of crops food preparation and storage sheltering equipment and animals and various other domestic and agricultural purposes The value of the plantation came from its land and the enslaved people who toiled on it to produce crops for sale These same people produced the built environment the main house for the plantation owner the slave cabins barns and other structures of the complex 6 nbsp 1862 photograph of the slave quarter at Smiths Plantation in Port Royal South Carolina The slave house shown is of the saddlebag type The materials for a plantation s buildings for the most part came from the lands of the estate Lumber was obtained from the forested areas of the property 6 Depending on its intended use it was either split hewn or sawn 7 Bricks were most often produced onsite from sand and clay that was molded dried and then fired in a kiln If a suitable stone was available it was used Tabby was often used on the southern Sea Islands 6 nbsp Freeman Plantation House in Jefferson TexasFew plantation structures have survived into the modern era with the vast majority destroyed through natural disaster neglect or fire over the centuries With the collapse of the plantation economy and subsequent Southern transition from a largely agrarian to an industrial society plantations and their building complexes became obsolete Although the majority have been destroyed the most common structures to have survived are the plantation houses As is true of buildings in general the more substantially built and architecturally interesting buildings have tended to be the ones that survived into the modern age and are better documented than many of the smaller and simpler ones Several plantation homes of important persons including Mount Vernon Monticello and The Hermitage have also been preserved Less common are intact examples of slave housing The rarest survivors of all are the agricultural and lesser domestic structures especially those dating from the pre Civil War era 6 8 Slave quarters edit Main article Slave quarters in the United States nbsp 1870s photo of the brick slave quarters at Hermitage Plantation now destroyed near Savannah GeorgiaHousing for enslaved people although once one of the most common and distinctive features of the plantation landscape has largely disappeared in much of the South Many of the structures were insubstantial to begin with 9 Only the better built examples tended to survive and then usually only if they were put to other uses after emancipation The quarters could be next to the main house well away from it or both On large plantations they were often arranged in a village like grouping along an avenue away from the main house but sometimes were scattered around the plantation on the edges of the fields where the enslaved people toiled like most of the sharecropper cabins that were to come later 10 nbsp Slave house with a sugar kettle in the foreground at Woodland Plantation in West Pointe a la Hache LouisianaHouses for enslaved people were often of the most basic construction Meant for little more than sleeping they were usually rough log or frame one room cabins early examples often had chimneys made of clay and sticks 9 11 Hall and parlor houses two rooms were also represented on the plantation landscape offering a separate room for eating and sleeping Sometimes dormitories and two story dwellings were also used to house enslaved people Earlier examples rested on the ground with a dirt floor but later examples were usually raised on piers for ventilation Most of these represent the dwellings constructed for enslaved people who worked in the fields Rarely though such as at the former Hermitage Plantation in Georgia and Boone Hall in South Carolina even those who worked in the fields were provided with brick cabins 12 More fortunate in their accommodations were those who served in the enslavers houses or were skilled laborers They usually resided either in a part of the main house or in their own houses which were normally more comfortable dwellings than those of their counterparts who worked in the fields 11 12 A few enslavers went further in providing housing for the household servants When Waldwic in Alabama was remodeled in the Gothic Revival style in the 1852 the enslaved people serving the household were provided with larger accommodations that matched the architecture of the main house This model however was exceedingly rare 8 nbsp Remnants of the slave quarter at Faunsdale Plantation near Faunsdale AlabamaFamous landscape designer Frederick Law Olmsted had this recollection of a visit to plantations along the Georgia coast in 1855 In the afternoon I left the main road and towards night reached a much more cultivated district The forest of pines extended uninterruptedly on one side of the way but on the other was a continued succession of very large fields or rich dark soil evidently reclaimed swamp land which had been cultivated the previous year in Sea Island cotton or maize Beyond them a flat surface of still lower land with a silver thread of water curling through it extended Holland like to the horizon Usually at as great a distance as a quarter of a mile from the road and from a half mile to a mile apart were the residences of the planters large white houses with groves of evergreen trees about them and between these and the road were little villages of slave cabins The cottages were framed buildings boarded on the outside with shingle roofs and brick chimneys they stood fifty feet apart with gardens and pig yards At the head of the settlement in a garden looking down the street was an overseer s house and here the road divided running each way at right angles on one side to barns and a landing on the river on the other toward the mansion Frederick Law Olmsted A Journey in the Seaboard Slave States 13 Other residential structures edit nbsp Overseer s house at Oakland Plantation near Natchitoches LouisianaA crucial residential structure on larger plantations was an overseer s house The overseer was largely responsible for the success or failure of an estate making sure that quotas were met and sometimes meting out punishment for infractions by the enslaved The overseer was responsible for healthcare with enslaved people and slave houses inspected routinely He was also the record keeper of most crop inventories and held the keys to various storehouses 14 nbsp A garconniere bachelor s quarters at The Houmas near Burnside LouisianaThe overseer s house was usually a modest dwelling not far from the cabins of the enslaved workers The overseer and his family even when white and southern did not freely mingle with the planter and his family They were in a different social stratum than that of the owner and were expected to know their place In village type slave quarters on plantations with overseers his house was usually at the head of the slave village rather than near the main house at least partially due to his social position It was also part of an effort to keep the enslaved people compliant and prevent the beginnings of a slave rebellion a very real fear in the minds of most plantation owners 14 Economic studies indicate that fewer than 30 percent of planters employed white supervisors for their slave labor 15 Some planters appointed a trusted slave as the overseer and in Louisiana free black overseers were also used 14 Another residential structure largely unique to plantation complexes was the garconniere or bachelors quarters Mostly built by Louisiana Creole people but occasionally found in other parts of the Deep South formerly under the dominion of New France they were structures that housed the adolescent or unmarried sons of plantation owners At some plantations it was a free standing structure and at others it was attached to the main house by side wings It developed from the Acadian tradition of using the loft of the house as a bedroom for young men 16 Kitchen yard edit nbsp The detached brick kitchen building at the former Lowry Plantation outside of Marion Alabama The main house is wood frame with brick columns and piers A variety of domestic and lesser agricultural structures surrounded the main house on all plantations Most plantations possessed some if not all of these outbuildings often called dependencies commonly arranged around a courtyard to the rear of the main house known as the kitchen yard They included a cookhouse separate kitchen building pantry washhouse laundry smokehouse chicken house spring house or ice house milkhouse dairy covered well and cistern The privies would have been located some distance away from the plantation house and kitchen yard 17 The cookhouse or kitchen was almost always in a separate building in the South until modern times sometimes connected to the main house by a covered walkway This separation was partially due to the cooking fire generating heat all day long in an already hot and humid climate It also reduced the risk of fire Indeed on many plantations the cookhouse was built of brick while when the main house was of wood frame construction Another reason for the separation was to prevent the noise and smells of cooking activities from reaching the main house Sometimes the cookhouse contained two rooms one for the actual kitchen and the other to serve as the residence for the cook Still other arrangements had the kitchen in one room a laundry in the other and a second story for servant quarters 8 17 The pantry could be in its own structure or in a cool part of the cookhouse or a storehouse and would have secured items such as barrels of salt sugar flour cornmeal and the like 18 nbsp 1940 photograph of the washhouse laundry at Melrose Plantation in Melrose LouisianaThe washhouse is where clothes tablecloths and bed covers were cleaned and ironed It also sometimes had living quarters for the laundrywoman Cleaning laundry in this period was labor intensive for the domestic slaves that performed it It required various gadgets to accomplish the task The wash boiler was a cast iron or copper cauldron in which clothes or other fabrics and soapy water were heated over an open fire The wash stick was a wooden stick with a handle at its uppermost part and four to five prongs at its base It was simultaneously pounded up and down and rotated in the washing tub to aerate the wash solution and loosen any dirt The items would then be vigorously rubbed on a corrugated wash board until clean By the 1850s they would have been passed through a mangle Prior to that time wringing out the items was done by hand The items would then be ready to be hung out to dry or in inclement weather placed on a drying rack Ironing would have been done with a metal flat iron often heated in the fireplace and various other devices 19 nbsp Smokehouse at Wheatlands near Sevierville TennesseeThe milkhouse would have been used by enslaved people to make milk into cream butter and buttermilk The process started with separating the milk into skim milk and cream It was done by pouring the whole milk into a container and allowing the cream to naturally rise to the top This was collected into another container daily until several gallons had accumulated During this time the cream would sour slightly through naturally occurring bacteria This increased the efficiency of the churning to come Churning was an arduous task performed with a butter churn Once firm enough to separate out but soft enough to stick together the butter was taken out of the churn washed in very cold water and salted The churning process also produced buttermilk as a by product It was the remaining liquid after the butter was removed from the churn 20 All of the products of this process would have been stored in the spring house or ice house 17 nbsp 1937 photograph of one of two identical pigeonniers at Uncle Sam Plantation in Convent Louisiana One of the most ornate and complete plantation complexes left at that time it was bulldozed in 1940 for levee construction The smokehouse was utilized to preserve meat usually pork beef and mutton It was commonly built of hewn logs or brick Following the slaughter in the fall or early winter salt and sugar were applied to the meat at the beginning of the curing process and then the meat was slowly dried and smoked in the smokehouse by a fire that did not add any heat to the smokehouse itself 21 If it was cool enough the meat could also be stored there until it was consumed 17 The chicken house was a building where chickens were kept Its design could vary depending on whether the chickens were kept for egg production meat or both If for eggs there were often nest boxes for egg laying and perches on which the birds to sleep Eggs were collected daily 17 Some plantations also had pigeonniers dovecotes that in Louisiana sometimes took the form of monumental towers set near the main house The pigeons were raised to be eaten as a delicacy and their droppings were used as fertilizer 22 Few functions could take place on a plantation without a reliable water supply Every plantation had at least one and sometimes several wells These were usually roofed and often partially enclosed by latticework to exclude animals Since the well water in many areas was distasteful due to mineral content the potable water on many plantations came from cisterns that were supplied with rainwater by a pipe from a rooftop catchment These could be huge aboveground wooden barrels capped by metal domes such as was often seen in Louisiana and coastal areas of Mississippi or underground brick masonry domes or vaults common in other areas 8 23 Ancillary structures edit nbsp Schoolhouse for the owner s children at Thornhill near Forkland AlabamaSome structures on plantations provided subsidiary functions again the term dependency can be applied to these buildings A few were common such as the carriage house and blacksmith shop but most varied widely among plantations and were largely a function of what the planter wanted needed or could afford to add to the complex These buildings might include schoolhouses offices churches commissary stores gristmills and sawmills 8 24 Found on some plantations in every Southern state plantation schoolhouses served as a place for the hired tutor or governess to educate the planter s children and sometimes even those of other planters in the area 8 On most plantations however a room in the main house was sufficient for schooling rather than a separate dedicated building Paper was precious so the children often recited their lessons until they memorized them The usual texts in the beginning were the Bible a primer and a hornbook As the children grew older their schooling began to prepare them for their adult roles on the plantation Boys studied academic subjects proper social etiquette and plantation management while girls learned art music French and the domestic skills suited to the mistress of a plantation 25 nbsp Plantation office at Waverley near West Point MississippiMost plantation owners maintained an office for keeping records transacting business writing correspondence and the like 8 Although it like the schoolroom was most often within the main house or another structure it was not at all rare for a complex to have a separate plantation office John C Calhoun used his plantation office at his Fort Hill plantation in Clemson South Carolina as a private sanctuary of sorts with it utilized as both study and library during his twenty five year residency 26 nbsp The Negro Baptist Church at Friendfield Plantation near Georgetown South CarolinaAnother structure found on some estates was a plantation chapel or church These were built for a variety of reasons In many cases the planter built a church or chapel for the use of the plantation slaves although they usually recruited a white minister to conduct the services 27 Some were built to exclusively serve the plantation family but many more were built to serve the family and others in the area who shared the same faith This seems to be especially true with planters within the Episcopal denomination Early records indicate that at Faunsdale Plantation the mistress of the estate Louisa Harrison gave regular instruction to her slaves by reading the services of the church and teaching the Episcopal catechism to their children Following the death of her first husband she had a large Carpenter Gothic church built St Michael s Church She latter remarried to Rev William A Stickney who served as the Episcopal minister of St Michael s and was later appointed by Bishop Richard Wilmer as a Missionary to the Negroes after which Louisa joined him as an unofficial fellow minister among the African Americans of the Black Belt 28 nbsp The Chapel of the Cross at Annandale Plantation near Madison MississippiMost plantation churches were of wood frame construction although some were built in brick often stuccoed Early examples tended towards the vernacular or neoclassicism but later examples were almost always in the Gothic Revival style A few rivaled those built by southern town congregations Two of the most elaborate extant examples in the Deep South are the Chapel of the Cross at Annandale Plantation and St Mary s Chapel at Laurel Hill Plantation both Episcopalian structures in Mississippi In both cases the original plantation houses have been destroyed but the quality and design of the churches can give some insight into how elaborate some plantation complexes and their buildings could be St Mary Chapel in Natchez dates to 1839 built in stuccoed brick with large Gothic and Tudor arch windows hood mouldings over the doors and windows buttresses a crenelated roof line and a small Gothic spire crowning the whole 29 Although construction records are very sketchy the Chapel of the Cross built from 1850 to 1852 near Madison may be attributable to Frank Wills or Richard Upjohn both of whom designed almost identical churches in the North during the same time period that the Chapel of the Cross was built 30 31 nbsp Plantation store at Oakland Plantation near Natchitoches LouisianaAnother secondary structure on many plantations during the height of the sharecropping era was the plantation store or commissary Although some prewar plantations had a commissary that distributed food and supplies to enslaved people the plantation store was essentially a postwar addition to the plantation complex In addition to the share of their crop already owed to the plantation owner for the use of his or her land tenants and sharecroppers purchased usually on credit against their next crop the food staples and equipment that they relied on for their existence 8 32 This type of debt bondage for blacks and poor whites led to a populist movement in the late 19th century that began to bring blacks and whites together for a common cause This early populist movement is largely credited with helping to cause state governments in the South mostly controlled by the planter elite to enact various laws that disenfranchised poor whites and blacks through grandfather clauses literacy tests poll taxes and various other laws 32 Agricultural structures edit nbsp Carriage house left and stable right at Melrose in Natchez MississippiThe agricultural structures on plantations had some basic structures in common and others that varied widely They depended on what crops and animals were raised on the plantation Common crops included corn upland cotton sea island cotton rice sugarcane and tobacco Besides those mentioned earlier cattle ducks goats hogs and sheep were raised for their derived products and or meat All estates would have possessed various types of animal pens stables and a variety of barns Many plantations utilized a number of specialized structures that were crop specific and only found on that type of plantation 33 Plantation barns can be classified by function depending on what type of crop and livestock were raised 34 In the upper South like their counterparts in the North barns had to provide basic shelter for the animals and storage of fodder Unlike the upper regions most plantations in the lower South did not have to provide substantial shelter to their animals during the winter Animals were often kept in fattening pens with a simple shed for shelter with the main barn or barns being utilized for crop storage or processing only 33 Stables were an essential type of barn on the plantation used to house both horses and mules These were usually separate one for each type of animal The mule stable was the most important on the vast majority of estates since the mules did most of the work pulling the plows and carts 33 nbsp Tobacco barn near Lexington KentuckyBarns not involved in animal husbandry were most commonly the crib barn corn cribs or other types of granaries storage barns or processing barns Crib barns were typically built of unchinked logs although they were sometimes covered with vertical wood siding Storage barns often housed unprocessed crops or those awaiting consumption or transport to market Processing barns were specialized structures that were necessary for helping to actually process the crop 34 Tobacco plantations were most common in certain parts of Georgia Kentucky Missouri North Carolina Tennessee South Carolina and Virginia The first agricultural plantations in Virginia were founded on the growing of tobacco Tobacco production on plantations was very labor intensive It required the entire year to gather seeds start them growing in cold frames and then transplant the plants to the fields once the soil had warmed Then the enslaved people had to weed the fields all summer and remove the flowers from the tobacco plants in order to force more energy into the leaves Harvesting was done by plucking individual leaves over several weeks as they ripened or cutting entire tobacco plants and hanging them in vented tobacco barns to dry called curing 35 36 nbsp Winnowing barn foreground and rice pounding mill background at Mansfield Plantation near Georgetown South CarolinaRice plantations were common in the South Carolina Lowcountry Until the 19th century rice was threshed from the stalks and the husk was pounded from the grain by hand a very labor intensive endeavor Steam powered rice pounding mills had become common by the 1830s They were used to thresh the grain from the inedible chaff A separate chimney required for the fires powering the steam engine was adjacent to the pounding mill and often connected by an underground system The winnowing barn a building raised roughly a story off of the ground on posts was used to separate the lighter chaff and dust from the rice 37 38 nbsp Ruins of a sugar mill at Laurel Valley Plantation in Thibodaux LouisianaSugar plantations were most commonly found in Louisiana In fact Louisiana produced almost all of the sugar grown in the United States during the prewar period From one quarter to one half of all sugar consumed in the United States came from Louisiana sugar plantations Plantations grew sugarcane from Louisiana s colonial era onward but large scale production did not begin until the 1810s and 1820s A successful sugar plantation required a skilled retinue of hired labor and enslaved people 39 The most specialized structure on a sugar plantation was the sugar mill sugar house where by the 1830s the steam powered mill crushed the sugarcane stalks between rollers This squeezed the juice from the stalks and the cane juice would run out the bottom of the mill through a strainer to be collected into a tank From there the juice went through a process that removed impurities from the liquid and thickened it through evaporation It was steam heated in vats where additional impurities were removed by adding lime to the syrup and then the mixture was strained At this point the liquid had been transformed into molasses It was then placed into a closed vessel known as a vacuum pan where it was boiled until the sugar in the syrup was crystallized The crystallized sugar was then cooled and separated from any remaining molasses in a process known as purging The final step was packing the sugar into hogshead barrels for transport to market 40 nbsp Cotton press from the Norfleet Plantation now relocated to Tarboro North CarolinaCotton plantations the most common type of plantation in the South prior to the Civil War were the last type of plantation to fully develop Cotton production was a very labor intensive crop to harvest with the fibers having to be hand picked from the bolls This was coupled with the equally laborious removal of seeds from fiber by hand 41 Following the invention of the cotton gin cotton plantations sprang up all over the South and cotton production soared along with the expansion of slavery Cotton also caused plantations to grow in size During the financial panics of 1819 and 1837 when demand by British mills for cotton dropped many small planters went bankrupt and their land and slaves were bought by larger plantations As cotton producing estates grew in size so did the number of slaveholders and the average number of enslaved people held 42 41 A cotton plantation normally had a cotton gin house where the cotton gin was used to remove the seeds from raw cotton After ginning the cotton had to be baled before it could be warehoused and transported to market This was accomplished with a cotton press an early type of baler that was usually powered by two mules walking in a circle with each attached to an overhead arm that turned a huge wooden screw The downward action of this screw compressed the processed cotton into a uniform bale shaped wooden enclosure where the bale was secured with twine 43 Plantation complexes in the 21st century edit nbsp Monticello located outside Charlottesville Virginia was the primary plantation house of Thomas JeffersonMany manor houses survive and in some cases former slave dwellings have been rebuilt or renovated To pay for the upkeep some like the Monmouth Plantation in Natchez Mississippi and the Lipscomb Plantation in Durham North Carolina have become small luxury hotels or bed and breakfasts Not only Monticello and Mount Vernon but some 375 former plantation houses are museums that can be visited There are examples in every Southern state Centers of plantation life such as Natchez run plantation tours Traditionally the museum houses presented an idyllic dignified lost cause vision of the antebellum South Recently and to different degrees some have begun to acknowledge the horrors of slavery which made that life possible 44 In late 2019 after contact initiated by Color of Change five major websites often used for wedding planning have pledged to cut back on promoting and romanticizing weddings at former slave plantations The New York Times earlier in 2019 decided to exclude couples who were being married on plantations from wedding announcements and other wedding coverage 45 Social and labor organization editPlantation owner edit nbsp Three planters after 1845 The Metropolitan Museum of Art nbsp The Old Plantation How We Lived in Great House and Cabin before the War 1901 by Confederate chaplain and planter James Battle AvirettAn individual who owned a plantation was known as a planter Historians of the prewar South have generally defined planter most precisely as a person owning property real estate and keeping 20 or more people enslaved 46 In the Black Belt counties of Alabama and Mississippi the terms planter and farmer were often synonymous 47 The historians Robert Fogel and Stanley Engerman define large planters as those who enslaved over 50 people and medium planters as those who enslaved between 16 and 50 people 48 Historian David Williams in A People s History of the Civil War Struggles for the Meaning of Freedom suggests that the minimum requirement for planter status was twenty people enslaved especially since a Southern planter could exempt Confederate duty for one white male per twenty people owned 49 In his study of Black Belt counties in Alabama Jonathan Weiner defines planters by ownership of real property rather than of slaves A planter for Weiner owned at least 10 000 worth of real estate in 1850 and 32 000 worth in 1860 equivalent to about the top eight percent of landowners 50 In his study of southwest Georgia Lee Formwalt defines planters in terms of size of land holdings rather than in terms of numbers of people enslaved Formwalt s planters are in the top 4 5 of landowners translating into real estate worth 6 000 or more in 1850 24 000 or more in 1860 and 11 000 or more in 1870 51 In his study of Harrison County Texas Randolph B Campbell classifies large planters as owners of 20 people and small planters as owners of between 10 and 19 people 52 In Chicot and Phillips Counties Arkansas Carl H Moneyhon defines large planters as owners of 20 or more people and of 600 acres 240 ha or more 53 Many nostalgic memoirs about plantation life were published in the postwar South 54 For example James Battle Avirett who grew up on the Avirett Stephens Plantation in Onslow County North Carolina and served as an Episcopal chaplain in the Confederate States Army published The Old Plantation How We Lived in Great House and Cabin before the War in 1901 54 Such memoirs often included descriptions of Christmas as the epitome of anti modern order exemplified by the great house and extended family 55 Novels often adapted into films presented a romantic sanitized view of plantation life and ignored or glorified white supremacy The most popular of these were The Birth of a Nation 1916 based on Thomas Dixon Jr s best selling novel The Clansman 1905 and Gone with the Wind 1939 based on the best selling novel of the same name 1936 by Margaret Mitchell Overseer edit nbsp An overseer on horseback observes the enslaved people picking cotton c 1850On larger plantations an overseer represented the planter in matters of daily management Usually perceived as uncouth ill educated and low class he had the often despised task of meting out punishments in order to keep up discipline and secure the profit of his employer 56 better source needed Enslaved people edit See also Slavery in the United States and Treatment of slaves in the United States Southern plantations depended upon slaves to do the agricultural work Honestly plantation and slavery is one and the same said an employee of the Whitney Plantation in 2019 57 Many plantations including George Washington s Mount Vernon and Thomas Jefferson s Monticello are working to present a more accurate image of what life was like for slaves and slave owners 58 The changes have begun to draw people long alienated by the sites whitewashing of the past and to satisfy what staff call a hunger for real history as plantations add slavery focused tours rebuild cabins and reconstruct the lives of the enslaved with help from their descendants 57 McLeod Plantation focuses primarily on slavery McLeod focuses on bondage talking bluntly about slave labor camps and shunning the big white house for the fields 57 I was depressed by the time I left and questioned why anyone would want to live in South Carolina read one review of a tour posted to Twitter 58 See also edit nbsp United States portalAfrican American history American gentry Atlantic slave trade Casa Grande amp Senzala similar concept in Brazilian plantations History of the Southern United States Journal of a Residence on a Georgian Plantation in 1838 1839 List of plantations in the United States Lost Cause of the Confederacy Plain Folk of the Old South 1949 book by historian Frank Lawrence Owsley Plantation era songs Plantation tradition genre of literature Plantations of Leon County Florida Planter class Sharecropping in the United States Slavery at Tuckahoe plantation Slavery in the United States Treatment of slaves in the United States White supremacyReferences edit Guelzo Allen C 2012 Fateful Lightning A New History of the Civil War and Reconstruction New York Oxford University Press pp 33 36 ISBN 978 0 19 984328 2 a b Phillips Ulrich Bonnell 1929 Life and Labor in the Old South Boston Little Brown and Company p 338 ISBN 978 0 316 70607 0 Robert J Vejnar II November 6 2008 Plantation Agriculture The Encyclopedia of Alabama Auburn University Retrieved April 15 2011 a b Vlach John Michael 1993 Back of the Big House The Architecture of Plantation Slavery Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press p 8 ISBN 978 0 8078 4412 0 McNeilly Donald P 2000 Old South Frontier Cotton Plantations and the Formation of Arkansas Society Fayetteville University of Arkansas Press p 129 ISBN 978 1557286192 Retrieved August 17 2017 a b c d Matrana Marc R 2009 Lost Plantations of the South Jackson University Press of Mississippi pp xi xv ISBN 978 1 57806 942 2 Edwards Jay Dearborn Nicolas Kariouk Pecquet du Bellay de Verton 2004 A Creole lexicon Architecture Landscape People Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press pp 153 157 ISBN 978 0 8071 2764 3 a b c d e f g h Robert Gamble September 2 2008 Plantation Architecture in Alabama The Encyclopedia of Alabama Auburn University Retrieved April 15 2011 a b Thomas E Davidson The Evolution of the Slave Quarter in Tidewater Virginia Jamestown Settlement and Yorktown Victory Center Jamestown Yorktown Foundation Retrieved April 15 2011 Vlach John Michael 1993 Back of the Big House The Architecture of Plantation Slavery Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press pp 10 12 192 ISBN 978 0 8078 4412 0 a b Mark Watson Slave Housing Slave Housing in Montgomery County Montgomery County Historical Society Archived from the original on November 25 2010 Retrieved April 15 2011 a b Vlach John Michael 1993 Back of the Big House The Architecture of Plantation Slavery Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press pp 155 159 ISBN 978 0 8078 4412 0 Olmsted Frederick Law 1968 A Journey in the Seaboard Slave States New York Negro University Press pp 416 417 a b c Overseer s House at the Rural Life Museum PDF Rural Life Museum Louisiana State University Archived from the original PDF on July 27 2011 Retrieved April 15 2011 Catherine Clinton The Southern Plantation Macmillan Information Now Encyclopedia Civil War Potpourri Retrieved April 15 2011 Edwards Jay Dearborn Nicolas Kariouk Pecquet du Bellay de Verton 2004 A Creole lexicon Architecture Landscape People Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press p 107 ISBN 978 0 8071 2764 3 a b c d e Mary Gunderson 2000 Southern Plantation Cooking Mankato Minn Blue Earth Books p 10 ISBN 978 0 7368 0357 1 Pond Catherine Seiberling 2007 The Pantry Its History and Modern Uses Layton Utah Gibbs Smith p 23 ISBN 978 1 4236 0004 6 Gaeta Bell Laundry in the 19th Century PDF East Bay Regional Park District Archived from the original PDF on April 11 2011 Retrieved April 15 2011 David B Fankhauser Making Buttermilk University of Cincinnati Clermont College Archived from the original on August 28 2007 Retrieved April 15 2011 Judith Quinn Mechanics and Functions of a Smokehouse PDF University of Delaware Library Retrieved April 15 2011 dead link French Creole Architecture Louisiana Division of Historic Preservation National Park Service Retrieved April 15 2011 Rodriguez Junius P 2007 Slavery in the United States A social political and historical encyclopedia Volume 2 Santa Barbara Calif ABC CLIO p 671 ISBN 978 1 85109 544 5 Roberts Bruce Elizabeth Kedash 1990 Plantation homes of the James River Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press pp 4 6 ISBN 978 0 8078 4278 2 Colonial Education Stratford Hall Plantation Robert E Lee Memorial Association Inc Stratford Hall Archived from the original on September 26 2011 Retrieved April 15 2011 Fort Hill Plantation Office South Carolina Historical Society The Historical Marker Database Retrieved April 15 2011 Diana J Kleiner Waldeck Plantation Texas State Historical Association Retrieved April 15 2011 Faunsdale Plantation Papers 1805 1975 PDF Department of Archives and Manuscripts Birmingham Public Library Retrieved April 15 2011 St Mary Chapel located on Laurel Hill Plantation in Adams County approximately eight 8 miles south of Natchez This property was an English land grant to the Richard Ellis family and continues to be owned by his descendants Note that there is also a Laurel Hill Plantation in Jefferson County that was owned by the Rush Nutt family St Mary Basilica Archives Episcopal Diocese of Jackson St Mary Basilica Archives Retrieved April 15 2011 History of The Chapel of the Cross Chapel of the Cross Archived from the original on June 13 2010 Retrieved April 15 2011 Chapel Of The Cross Mississippi Department of Archives and History Archived from the original on February 25 2012 Retrieved April 15 2011 a b Whayne Jeannie M 1990 A New Plantation South Land Labor and Federal Favor in Twentieth century Arkansas Charlottesville University of Virginia Press pp 55 57 ISBN 978 0 8139 1655 2 a b c Poesch Jessie J Barbara SoRelle Bacot 1997 Louisiana Buildings 1720 1940 The Historic American Buildings Survey Baton Rouge LSU Press pp 157 165 ISBN 978 0 8071 2054 5 a b The Preservation of Historic Barns National Park Service Archived from the original on February 19 2011 Retrieved April 15 2011 Hart John Fraser Mather Eugene Cotton September 1961 The Character of Tobacco Barns and Their Role in the Tobacco Economy of the United States Annals of the Association of American Geographers 51 3 274 293 doi 10 1111 j 1467 8306 1961 tb00379 x Tobacco and Staple Agriculture Tobacco in Virginia Virginia Places Retrieved April 15 2011 Georgetown County Rice Culture c 1750 c 1910 National Register of Historic Places National Park Service Retrieved April 15 2011 Rob Martin The Farming and Processing of Rice Isle of Wight History Centre Archived from the original on June 25 2011 Retrieved April 15 2011 Antebellum Louisiana Agrarian Life The Cabildo Two Centuries of Louisiana History Louisiana State Museum Archived from the original on May 26 2011 Retrieved April 16 2011 Sugarhouse and Sugar Production at Ashland Beyond The Great House Archaeology at Ashland Belle Helene Plantation Louisiana Division of Archaeology Archived from the original on November 20 2011 Retrieved April 16 2011 a b Jean M West King Cotton The Fiber of Slavery Encyclopedia of Slavery in America Archived from the original on September 3 2011 Retrieved April 16 2011 Sellers James Benson 1950 Slavery in Alabama Tuscaloosa University of Alabama Press pp 19 43 ISBN 0 8173 0594 7 The Cotton Press Africans in America Public Broadcasting Service Retrieved April 15 2011 Holpuch Amanda August 15 2019 Do idyllic southern plantations really tell the story of slavery The Guardian Murphy Heather December 5 2019 Pinterest and The Knot Pledge to Stop Promoting Plantation Weddings New York Times Peter Kolchin American Slavery 1619 1877 New York Hill and Wang 1993 xiii Oakes Ruling Race 52 Fogel Robert William Engerman Stanley L 1974 Time on the Cross The Economics of American Negro Slavery Boston Little Brown ISBN 9780316287005 OCLC 311437227 David Williams A People s History of the Civil War Struggles for the Meaning of Freedom New York The New Press 2005 Wiener Jonathan M Autumn 1976 Planter Persistence and Social Change Alabama 1850 1870 Journal of Interdisciplinary History 7 2 235 60 doi 10 2307 202735 JSTOR 202735 Formwalt Lee W October 1981 Antebellum Planter Persistence Southwest Georgia A Case Study Plantation Society in the Americas 1 3 410 29 ISSN 0192 5059 OCLC 571605035 Campbell Randolph B May 1982 Population Persistence and Social Change in Nineteenth Century Texas Harrison County 1850 1880 Journal of Southern History 48 2 185 204 doi 10 2307 2207106 JSTOR 2207106 Moneyhon Carl H 1992 The Impact of the Civil War in Arkansas The Mississippi River Plantation Counties Arkansas Historical Quarterly 51 2 105 18 doi 10 2307 40025847 JSTOR 40025847 a b Anderson David February 2005 Down Memory Lane Nostalgia for the Old South in Post Civil War Plantation Reminiscences The Journal of Southern History 71 1 105 136 JSTOR 27648653 Anderson David J Fall 2014 Nostalgia for Christmas in Postbellum Plantation Reminiscences Southern Studies 21 2 39 73 Richter William L August 20 2009 Overseers The A to Z of the Old South The A to Z Guide Series Vol 51 Lanham Maryland Scarecrow Press published 2009 p 258 ISBN 9780810870000 Retrieved November 29 2016 On larger plantations the planter s direct representative in day to day management of the crops care of the land livestock farm implements and slaves was the white overseer It was his job to work the labor force to produce a profitable crop He was an indispensable cog in the plantation machinery The overseer has usually been portrayed as an uncouth uneducated character of low class whose main purpose was to harass the slaves and get in the way of the planter s progressive goals of production More than that the overseer had a position between master and slave in which it was hard to win Directing slave labor was looked down upon by a large number of people North and South He was faced with planter demands that were at times unreasonable He was forbidden to fraternize with the slaves He had no chance of advancement unless he left the profession He was bombarded with incessant complaints from masters who did not appreciate the task he faced and slaves who sought to play off master and overseer against each other to avoid work and gain privileges The very nature of the job was difficult The overseer had to care for the slaves and gain the largest crop possible These were often contradictory goals a b c Knowles Hannah September 8 2019 As plantations talk more honestly about slavery some visitors are pushing back Washington Post a b Brockell Gillian August 8 2019 Some white people don t want to hear about slavery at plantations built by slaves Washington Post Further reading edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Plantation houses in the United States Blassingame John W The Slave Community Plantation Life in the Antebellum South 1979 Evans Chris The Plantation Hoe The Rise and Fall of an Atlantic Commodity 1650 1850 William and Mary Quarterly 2012 69 1 pp 71 100 Phillips Ulrich B American Negro Slavery a Survey of the Supply Employment and Control of Negro Labor as Determined by the Plantation Regime 1918 reprint 1966 online at Project Gutenberg google edition Phillips Ulrich B Life and Labor in the Old South 1929 excerpts and text search Phillips Ulrich B Phillips Ulrich B 1905 The Economic Cost of Slaveholding in the Cotton Belt Political Science Quarterly 20 2 257 275 doi 10 2307 2140400 hdl 2027 hvd 32044082042185 JSTOR 2140400 Silkenat David Scars on the Land An Environmental History of Slavery in the American South New York Oxford University Press 2022 Thompson Edgar Tristram The Plantation edited by Sidney Mintz and George Baca University of South Carolina Press 2011 176 pages 1933 dissertation Weiner Marli Frances Mistresses and Slaves Plantation Women in South Carolina 1830 80 1997 White Deborah G Aren t I a Woman Female Slaves in the Plantation South 2nd ed 1999 excerpt and text search Smith Julia Floyd 2017 Slavery and plantation growth in Antebellum Florida 1821 1860 PDF University of Florida Press Phillips Ulrich B ed Plantation and Frontier Documents 1649 1863 Illustrative of Industrial History in the Colonial and Antebellum South Collected from MSS and Other Rare Sources 2 Volumes 1909 online edition The Plantation System in Southern Life Short documentary YouTube 1950 Archived from the original on November 7 2021 Retrieved February 1 2020 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Plantation complexes in the Southern United States amp oldid 1205955407, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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