15 Matching Annotations
- Apr 2024
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archive.org archive.org
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https://archive.org/details/williambyrdshist00byrd/mode/2up<br /> William Byrd's histories of the dividing line betwixt Virginia and North Carolina by Byrd, William, 1674-1744; Boyd, William Kenneth, 1879-1938; North Carolina. State Dept. of Archives and History
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- Mar 2024
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He marveled at how the SouthCarolinians deluded themselves in believing they were safe, burdened asthey were with a large slave population—“stupid security,” he called it.
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He mused that colonization would have had a better outcomeif male settlers had been encouraged to intermarry with Indian women.Over two generations, the Indian stock would have improved, as a speciesof flower or tree might; dark skin blanched white, heathen ways dimmed.Here, Byrd was borrowing from the author John Lawson, who wrote in ANew Voyage to Carolina that men of lower rank gained an economicadvantage by marrying Native women who brought land to the union.
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In milder weather they got as far as thinking aboutplunging a hoe into the ground.
How then were they making any sort of living at all in such conditions? Hunting? Gathering? (1700s)
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The Fundamental Constitutions was really a declaration of war againstpoor settlers.
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A court of heraldry was added to this strange brew: in overseeingmarriages and maintaining pedigree, it provided further evidence of theintention to fix (and police) class identity.
Presumably these early ideas of marriage and pedigree in the Carolinas heavily influenced not only class laws but issues with miscegenation which still have root there today.
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The Fundamental Constitutions did more than endorse slavery. It was amanifesto promoting a semifeudalistic and wholly aristocratic society.
freedom?? really?
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Lord Anthony Ashley Cooper, Earl of Shaftesbury,
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Albemarle County, named after one of the proprietors, GeorgeMonck, Duke of Albemarle.
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he authoredthe Fundamental Constitutions of Carolina (1669), which granted that“every Freeman in Carolina shall have ABSOLUTE POWER ANDAUTHORITY over his Negro Slaves.”
we often conveniently ignore Locke on slavery...
Tags
- George Monck
- John Lawson
- A New Voyage to Carolina
- Fundamental Constitutions of Carolina (1669)
- quotes
- poverty in North Carolina
- North Carolina
- dowries
- James Edward Oglethorpe
- slavery
- John Locke
- power over
- Anthony Ashley Cooper
- South Carolina
- Earl of Shaftesbury
- sexual mores
- class identity
- stupid security
- miscegenation
- William Byrd
Annotators
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- Feb 2024
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www.npr.org www.npr.org
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- Nov 2023
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dianeravitch.net dianeravitch.net
- Jun 2022
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www.nytimes.com www.nytimes.com
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First, the majority population in eastern Virginia were enslaved blacks. Whites lived in constant fear of slave insurrection. Everyone knew about the 1739 slave rebellion in Stono, S.C., when blacks broke into a store, decapitated the shopkeepers, seized guns and powder, and marched with flying banners, beating drums and cries of “Liberty!” Up to 100 joined the rebellion before being engaged by a contingent of armed, mounted militiamen. Scores died in the ensuing battle.
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- Jan 2022
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www.nytimes.com www.nytimes.com
- Jul 2019
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www.boehringer-ingelheim.com www.boehringer-ingelheim.com
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