In this Book
- South Carolina Women: Their Lives and Times
- Book
- 2009
- Published by: University of Georgia Press
- Series: Southern Women: Their Lives and Times
The volume begins with a profile of the Lady of Cofitachequi, who sat at the head of an Indian chiefdom and led her people in encounters with Spanish explorers. The essays that follow look at well-known women such as Eliza Lucas Pinckney, who managed several indigo plantations; the abolitionist Angelina Grimke; and Civil War diarist Mary Boykin Chesnut. Also included, however, are essays on the much-less-documented lives of poor white farming women (the Neves family of Mush Creek), free African American women (Margaret Bettingall and her daughters), and slave women, the latter based on interviews and their own letters. The essays in volume 1 demonstrate that many women in this most conservative of states, with its strong emphasis on traditional gender roles, carved out far richer public lives than historians have often attributed to antebellum southern women.
Historical figures included:
- The Lady of Cofitachequi
- Judith Giton Manigault
- Mary Fisher
- Sophia Hume
- Mary-Anne Schad
- Mrs. Brown
- Rebecca Brewton Motte
- Eliza Lucas Pinckney
- Harriott Pinckney Horry
- Enslaved woman known as Dolly
- Enslaved woman known as Lavinia
- Enslaved woman known as Maria
- Enslaved woman known as Susan
- Women of the Bettingall-Tunno Family
- Angelina Grimké
- Elizabeth Allston Pringle
- Mother Mary Baptista Aloysius
- Mary Boykin Chesnut
- Frances Neves
- Lucy Holcombe Pickens
Table of Contents
- Acknowledgments
- p. xvii
- Introduction
- pp. 1-10
- Mary Boykin Chesnut: Civil War Redux
- pp. 233-254
- Notes on Contributors
- pp. 299-304