Skip to main content
Harvard University Press - home
Plantation Enterprise in Colonial South Carolina

Plantation Enterprise in Colonial South Carolina

S. Max Edelson

ISBN 9780674060227

Publication date: 05/15/2011

This impressive scholarly debut deftly reinterprets one of America's oldest symbols--the southern slave plantation. S. Max Edelson examines the relationships between planters, slaves, and the natural world they colonized to create the Carolina Lowcountry.

European settlers came to South Carolina in 1670 determined to possess an abundant wilderness. Over the course of a century, they settled highly adaptive rice and indigo plantations across a vast coastal plain. Forcing slaves to turn swampy wastelands into productive fields and to channel surging waters into elaborate irrigation systems, planters initiated a stunning economic transformation.

The result, Edelson reveals, was two interdependent plantation worlds. A rough rice frontier became a place of unremitting field labor. With the profits, planters made Charleston and its hinterland into a refined, diversified place to live. From urban townhouses and rural retreats, they ran multiple-plantation enterprises, looking to England for affirmation as agriculturists, gentlemen, and stakeholders in Britain's American empire. Offering a new vision of the Old South that was far from static, Edelson reveals the plantations of early South Carolina to have been dynamic instruments behind an expansive process of colonization.

With a bold interdisciplinary approach, Plantation Enterprise reconstructs the environmental, economic, and cultural changes that made the Carolina Lowcountry one of the most prosperous and repressive regions in the Atlantic world.

Praise

  • With a heady combination of deep research, keen insight, and a revisionist's eye for cant, S. Max Edelson brilliantly rethinks the development of South Carolina's central institution. In place of the Big House and static relations of mastership, Edelson offers an enterprise of enormous dynamism, whose ever-changing needs and demands made and remade South Carolina society and its peoples.

    —Ira Berlin, author of Generations of Captivity

Awards

  • 2006, Winner of the Theodore Saloutos Memorial Award

Author

  • S. Max Edelson is Associate Professor of History at the University of Virginia.

Book Details

  • 400 pages
  • 6-1/8 x 9-1/4 inches
  • Harvard University Press

From this author

Recommendations