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Unali'yi Lodge
Unali’Yi Lodge 236 Table of Contents Letter for Our Lodge Chief ................................................................................................................................................. 7 Letter from the Editor ......................................................................................................................................................... 8 Local Parks and Camping ...................................................................................................................................... 9 James Island County Park ............................................................................................................................................... 10 Palmetto Island County Park ......................................................................................................................................... 12 Wannamaker County Park ............................................................................................................................................. 13 South Carolina State Parks ................................................................................................................................. 14 Aiken State Park ................................................................................................................................................................. 15 Andrew Jackson State Park ........................................................................................................................................... -
Archaeological Survey at Rose Hill Plantation State Historic Site
University of South Carolina Scholar Commons Archaeology and Anthropology, South Carolina Faculty & Staff Publications Institute of 9-2020 Archaeological Survey at Rose Hill Plantation State Historic Site Stacey L. Young Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarcommons.sc.edu/sciaa_staffpub Part of the Archaeological Anthropology Commons Archaeological Survey at Rose Hill Plantation State Historic Site By Stacey L. Young, Director, SCIAA Applied Research Division The South Carolina Institute of Archaeology and Anthropology, Applied Research Division (SCIAA-ARD) recently completed a Phase I archaeological survey of Rose Hill Plantation State Historic Site located along the Tyger River in Union County, South Carolina. The work was performed on behalf of SC Department of Parks, Recreation and Tourism (SCPRT) to assist park staff with management of the property and site interpretation. Rose Hill is an early 19th to mid-20th-century plantation site that was home to William Henry Gist, his family, and families of enslaved laborers, sharecroppers, and tenant farmers, until it was sold in 1939 to the US Forest Service (USFS). The site now operates as a State Historic Site operated by SCPRT. Rose Hill was listed in the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) in 1970 for its association with William Henry Gist, his prominence in politics, and the architecture of the house. Figure 3: 1933 aerial image showing tenant house locations, fields, and Gist house. (Photo by SCIAA-ARD) William Henry Gist (1807-1874), Cotton and corn were grown on the perhaps mostly known for his secessionist plantation that was maintained by a views, served various positions in the population of about 200 enslaved laborers. -
'They Made Gullah': Modernist Primitivists and The
“ ‘They Made Gullah’: Modernist Primitivists and the Discovery and Creation of Sapelo Island, Georgia’s Gullah Community, 1915-1991” By Melissa L. Cooper A Dissertation submitted to the Graduate School-New Brunswick Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Graduate Program in History written under the direction of Dr. Mia Bay and approved by New Brunswick, New Jersey January 2012 2012 Melissa L. Cooper ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION “ ‘They Made Gullah’: Modernist Primitivists and the Discovery and Creation of Sapelo Island, Georgia’s Gullah Community, 1915-1991” by Melissa L. Cooper Dissertation Director: Dr. Mia Bay ABSTRACT: The history of Sapelo Islanders in published works reveals a complex cast of characters, each one working through ideas about racial distinction and inheritance; African culture and spirituality; and the legacy of slavery during the most turbulent years in America’s race-making history. Feuding social scientists, adventure seeking journalists, amateur folklorists, and other writers, initiated and shaped the perception of Sapelo Islanders’ distinct connection to Africa during the 1920s and 1930s, and labeled them “Gullah.” These researchers characterized the “Gullah,” as being uniquely connected to their African past, and as a population among whom African “survivals” were readily observable. This dissertation argues that the popular view of Sapelo Islanders’ “uniqueness” was the product of changing formulations about race and racial distinction in America. Consequently, the “discovery” of Sapelo Island’s Gullah folk was more a sign of times than an anthropological discovery. This dissertation interrogates the intellectual motives of the researchers and writers who have explored Sapelo Islanders in their works, and argues that the advent of American Modernism, the development of new social scientific theories and popular cultural works during the 1920s and 1930s, and other trends shaped their depictions. -
Information to Users
INFORMATION TO USERS This manuscript has been reproduced trom the microfilm master~ UMI films the text directly trom the original or copy submitted~ Thus, some thesis and dissertation copies are in typewriter face, while others may be fram anytype of computer printer. The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. Broken orindistinct print, colored orpoor quality illustrations. and photographs, print bleedthrough, substandarcl margins, and improper alignment can adversely affect reproduction~ ln the unlikely event that the author did not send UMI a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if unauthorized copyright material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Oversize materials (e.g., maps, drawings, charts) are reproduced by sectioning the original, beginning at the upperleft.-hand ccmer and continuing tram left to right in equal sections with small overlaps. ProQuest Information and Leaming 300 North Zeeb Road, Ann Arbor, MI 48106-1346 USA 800-521-0600 Secession, Sequence, and the State: South Carolina's Decision to Lead the Secession Movement in 1860 Lawrence Anderson Department ofPolitical Science McGill University, Montreal July2001 A thesis submitted to the FacultyofGraduate Studies and Research inpartial fi,dfillment orthe requirements ofthe degree ofDoctorofPhilosophy. • © Lawrence Anderson 2001 National Ubrary BmIiothèQue nationale 1+1 ofC8nada du Canada Acquisitions and Acquisitions et Bibliographie Services services bibliographiques 315 WeliaglDn SIr_ 315. rue WeIingtDn 0IawaON K1A 0N4 OI-.ON K1A0N4 c.nada c.n.da The author bas granted a non L'auteur a accordé me licence non exclusive licence allowing the exclusive pennettant à la National Library ofCanada ta Bibliothèque nationale du Canada de reproduce, 10aD, distnbute or sen reproduire, prêter, distribuer ou copies ofthis thesis inmicroform, vendre des copies de cette thèse sous paper or electronic formats. -
Legacy & Pastwatch Institute Of
University of South Carolina Scholar Commons Archaeology and Anthropology, South Carolina SCIAA Newsletter - Legacy & PastWatch Institute of 9-2020 Legacy - September 2020 South Carolina Institute of Archaeology and Anthropology--University of South Carolina Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarcommons.sc.edu/leg Part of the Archaeological Anthropology Commons, and the Military History Commons Inside... DIRECTOR’S NOTE New Battlefield Archaeology Book–– Partisans, Guerillas, and Irregulars Two New Book Chapters by SCIAA Staff RESEARCH VOL. 24, NO. 1, SEPTEMBER 2020 Artillery Ammunition from Star Fort Wateree Bug Ceramic Motif Scale Weights from Santa Elena Early Human Life on the Southeastern Coastal Plain Book Update of Southeastern Paleoamerican Survey Field Slave Quarters at Historic Brattonsville Castle Pinckney Project APPLIED RESEARCH Vietnam War-Era Training Villages at Fort Jackson Archaeological Survey at Rose Hill Ancient Weapons from the Siege of Plantation State Historic Site Ninety Six SAVANNAH RIVER By James Legg and Steve Smith ARCHAEOLOGICAL RESEARCH PROGRAM During the summer of 2020, we have been The Americans successfully employed Cemetery Survey in Jackson, South busy preparing the report for our two fire arrows in the siege of Fort Motte a few Carolina “Maymester” seasons of field work at the weeks before the siege of Ninety Six was SEAC 2019 Patty Jo Watson Award Star Fort, at Ninety Six National Historic undertaken (see Legacy December 2015), Site in Greenwood County. (See Legacy July for the fire arrow point we recovered from ARCHAEOLOGICAL RESEARCH 2018, July 2019, and the article on pages the American siege camp at Fort Motte). TRUST (ART) AND SCIAA DONORS 5-7 of this issue). -
Gist Family of South Carolina and Its Mary Land .Antecedents
The Gist Family of South Carolina and its Mary land .Antecedents BY WILSON GEE PRIVATELY PRINTED FOR THE AUTHOR BY JARMAN'S, INCORPORATED CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA 1 9 3 4 To THE MEMORY OF MY MOTHER PREFACE Among the earliest impressions of the author of this gen ealogical study are those of the reverence with which he was taught to look upon the austere to kindly faces in the oil portrai~ of his Gist ancestors as they seemed from their vantage points on the walls of the room to follow his every movement about the parlor of his boyhood home. From his mother, her relatives, his father, and others of the older people of Union County and the state of South Carolina,_ he learned much of the useful and valorous services rendered by this family, some members of which in almost each gen eration have with varying degrees of prominence left their mark upon the pages of history in times of both peace and war. Naturally he cherished these youthful impressions concerning an American family which dates far back into the colonial days of this republic. As he has grown older, he has collected every fragment of authentic material which he could gather about them with the hope that they might be some day permanently preserved in such a volume as this. But it is correct to state that very likely this ambition would never have been realized had not his cousin, Miss Margaret Adams Gist of York, South Carolina, who for thirty-five years or more has been gathering materials on the Gist family, generously decided to turn over to him temporarily for hi~ use her rich collections of all those years. -
Kings Mountain: the Celebration That Almost Wasn't 2014 National
The Palmetto Patriot Winner of the Grahame T. Smallwood Award at the 120th Annual Congress Best in the National Society for State Societies of more than 500 members with a publication of more than 10 pages Host Society 2014 National Congress Greenville, South Carolina 1775 1783 THE SOUTH CAROLINA SOCIETY of the SONS OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION 2013 Issue 4 Winter 2013 Organized April 1889 Kings Mountain: The celebration that almost wasn’t By Mark C. Anthony heritage organizations from even NSSAR Historic Sites having a location to conduct the an- & Celebrations Chairman nual celebration. Beginning on Friday, Sept. 27, The question was first asked at the I emailed Compatriot Jim Cook in Fall Leadership Meeting, “What will North Carolina from the Fall Lead- the anticipated shutdown of the Fed- ership Meeting in Louisville. Jim eral Government mean for the an- has served as the North Carolina nual Kings Mountain Celebration?” chairman with me being the South It was a good question that need- Carolina chairman for the past few ed immediate attention since “zero years. I asked him to start thinking hour” was only three days away, and about possible alternative locations the planned celebration was only six for the Kings Mountain Celebration. days after that. Among the possible alternatives were By way of background, the plan- the gravesite of Col. Frederick Ham- ning for the 2013 Kings Mountain bright, ancestor of former President Celebration had already taken into General Ed Butler among others, account one major change with re- Kings Mountain State Park, adja- spect to the location of the headquar- cent to the National Military Park, ters hotel for the event after more and downtown Gaffney, South Caro- than 10 years at the Super 8 Hotel in lina, where Gen. -
Pulitzer Prize
1946: no award given 1945: A Bell for Adano by John Hersey 1944: Journey in the Dark by Martin Flavin 1943: Dragon's Teeth by Upton Sinclair Pulitzer 1942: In This Our Life by Ellen Glasgow 1941: no award given 1940: The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck 1939: The Yearling by Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings Prize-Winning 1938: The Late George Apley by John Phillips Marquand 1937: Gone with the Wind by Margaret Mitchell 1936: Honey in the Horn by Harold L. Davis Fiction 1935: Now in November by Josephine Winslow Johnson 1934: Lamb in His Bosom by Caroline Miller 1933: The Store by Thomas Sigismund Stribling 1932: The Good Earth by Pearl S. Buck 1931 : Years of Grace by Margaret Ayer Barnes 1930: Laughing Boy by Oliver La Farge 1929: Scarlet Sister Mary by Julia Peterkin 1928: The Bridge of San Luis Rey by Thornton Wilder 1927: Early Autumn by Louis Bromfield 1926: Arrowsmith by Sinclair Lewis (declined prize) 1925: So Big! by Edna Ferber 1924: The Able McLaughlins by Margaret Wilson 1923: One of Ours by Willa Cather 1922: Alice Adams by Booth Tarkington 1921: The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton 1920: no award given 1919: The Magnificent Ambersons by Booth Tarkington 1918: His Family by Ernest Poole Deer Park Public Library 44 Lake Avenue Deer Park, NY 11729 (631) 586-3000 2012: no award given 1980: The Executioner's Song by Norman Mailer 2011: Visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan 1979: The Stories of John Cheever by John Cheever 2010: Tinkers by Paul Harding 1978: Elbow Room by James Alan McPherson 2009: Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout 1977: No award given 2008: The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Diaz 1976: Humboldt's Gift by Saul Bellow 2007: The Road by Cormac McCarthy 1975: The Killer Angels by Michael Shaara 2006: March by Geraldine Brooks 1974: No award given 2005: Gilead by Marilynne Robinson 1973: The Optimist's Daughter by Eudora Welty 2004: The Known World by Edward P. -
P R O S P E C T
PROSPECTUS CHRIS ABANI EDWARD ABBEY ABIGAIL ADAMS HENRY ADAMS JOHN ADAMS LÉONIE ADAMS JANE ADDAMS RENATA ADLER JAMES AGEE CONRAD AIKEN DANIEL ALARCÓN EDWARD ALBEE LOUISA MAY ALCOTT SHERMAN ALEXIE HORATIO ALGER JR. NELSON ALGREN ISABEL ALLENDE DOROTHY ALLISON JULIA ALVAREZ A.R. AMMONS RUDOLFO ANAYA SHERWOOD ANDERSON MAYA ANGELOU JOHN ASHBERY ISAAC ASIMOV JOHN JAMES AUDUBON JOSEPH AUSLANDER PAUL AUSTER MARY AUSTIN JAMES BALDWIN TONI CADE BAMBARA AMIRI BARAKA ANDREA BARRETT JOHN BARTH DONALD BARTHELME WILLIAM BARTRAM KATHARINE LEE BATES L. FRANK BAUM ANN BEATTIE HARRIET BEECHER STOWE SAUL BELLOW AMBROSE BIERCE ELIZABETH BISHOP HAROLD BLOOM JUDY BLUME LOUISE BOGAN JANE BOWLES PAUL BOWLES T. C. BOYLE RAY BRADBURY WILLIAM BRADFORD ANNE BRADSTREET NORMAN BRIDWELL JOSEPH BRODSKY LOUIS BROMFIELD GERALDINE BROOKS GWENDOLYN BROOKS CHARLES BROCKDEN BROWN DEE BROWN MARGARET WISE BROWN STERLING A. BROWN WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT PEARL S. BUCK EDGAR RICE BURROUGHS WILLIAM S. BURROUGHS OCTAVIA BUTLER ROBERT OLEN BUTLER TRUMAN CAPOTE ERIC CARLE RACHEL CARSON RAYMOND CARVER JOHN CASEY ANA CASTILLO WILLA CATHER MICHAEL CHABON RAYMOND CHANDLER JOHN CHEEVER MARY CHESNUT CHARLES W. CHESNUTT KATE CHOPIN SANDRA CISNEROS BEVERLY CLEARY BILLY COLLINS INA COOLBRITH JAMES FENIMORE COOPER HART CRANE STEPHEN CRANE ROBERT CREELEY VÍCTOR HERNÁNDEZ CRUZ COUNTEE CULLEN E.E. CUMMINGS MICHAEL CUNNINGHAM RICHARD HENRY DANA JR. EDWIDGE DANTICAT REBECCA HARDING DAVIS HAROLD L. DAVIS SAMUEL R. DELANY DON DELILLO TOMIE DEPAOLA PETE DEXTER JUNOT DÍAZ PHILIP K. DICK JAMES DICKEY EMILY DICKINSON JOAN DIDION ANNIE DILLARD W.S. DI PIERO E.L. DOCTOROW IVAN DOIG H.D. (HILDA DOOLITTLE) JOHN DOS PASSOS FREDERICK DOUGLASSOur THEODORE Mission DREISER ALLEN DRURY W.E.B. -
Azu Etd Mr 2011 0090 Sip1 M.Pdf
Expectant Immediatism: The South Carolina Secession Movement, 1859-1861 Item Type Electronic Thesis; text Authors Harvey, Sean Parulian Publisher The University of Arizona. Rights Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. Download date 30/09/2021 01:51:04 Item License http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ Link to Item http://hdl.handle.net/10150/144326 Table of Contents Introduction: A Reputation for Disunion .............................................................................................. 1 Part I: To Sow the Seeds of Disunion: Christopher Memminger’s Mission to Virginia .......................... 10 Part II: The Ties that Bind: The Association of 1860, Circular Letters and Fort Sumter ......................... 25 Conclusion: Expectations Fulfilled ...................................................................................................... 36 Bibliography ...................................................................................................................................... 38 Introduction: A Reputation for Disunion In the fall of 1860, South Carolinians thought they were living in precarious times. A group of concerned citizens, ever‐fearful of the growing power of the Republican Party, met in the waterfront town of Charleston, South Carolina. -
Willa Cather's Modern Sentimentalism
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Los Angeles Modern Sentimentalism: Feeling, Femininity, and Female Authorship in Interwar America A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy in English by Lisa Anne Mendelman 2015 © Copyright by Lisa Anne Mendelman 2015 ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION Modern Sentimentalism: Feeling, Femininity, and Female Authorship in Interwar America by Lisa Anne Mendelman Doctor of Philosophy in English University of California, Los Angeles, 2015 Professor Michael A. North, Chair “Modern Sentimentalism” chronicles the myriad ways in which sentimentalism evolves as modernism emerges. I demonstrate that sentimental aesthetics are more complex than we have thought and that these aesthetics participate in modern literary innovation. I likewise demonstrate that modernity, and the American interwar period in particular, enjoys a more complex relation to the sentimental than we have understood, and that twentieth-century constructs of gender and emotion equally revise and restyle sentimental precedent. Finally, I demonstrate that, when it comes to analyzing historical cultures of feeling, contemporary theories of affect have much to gain from archival methods. Synthesizing these claims, I identify a new form of feeling in modern aesthetic experience. Neither an idealized lapse into the past nor a naïve vision of the future, what I call “modern sentimentalism” most often registers the ironic consciousness of an enduring sentimental impulse. ii “Modern Sentimentalism” thus overturns -
Do Bad Things Happen When Works Enter the Public Domain?: Empirical Tests of Copyright Term Extension (With P
Chicago-Kent College of Law Scholarly Commons @ IIT Chicago-Kent College of Law All Faculty Scholarship Faculty Scholarship January 2012 Do Bad Things Happen When Works Enter the Public Domain?: Empirical Tests of Copyright Term Extension (with P. Heald) Christopher J. Buccafusco IIT Chicago-Kent College of Law, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarship.kentlaw.iit.edu/fac_schol Part of the Evidence Commons, and the Intellectual Property Law Commons Recommended Citation Christopher J. Buccafusco, Do Bad Things Happen When Works Enter the Public Domain?: Empirical Tests of Copyright Term Extension (with P. Heald), 28 Berkeley Tech. L.J. 1 (2012). Available at: https://scholarship.kentlaw.iit.edu/fac_schol/148 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Faculty Scholarship at Scholarly Commons @ IIT Chicago-Kent College of Law. It has been accepted for inclusion in All Faculty Scholarship by an authorized administrator of Scholarly Commons @ IIT Chicago-Kent College of Law. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected]. DO BAD THINGS HAPPEN WHEN WORKS ENTER THE PUBLIC DOMAIN?: EMPIRICAL TESTS OF COPYRIGHT TERM EXTENSION Christopher Buccafusco. & Paul J. Heald ABSTRACT According to the current copyright statute, in 2018, copyrighted works of music, film, and literature will begin to transition into the public domain. While this will prove a boon for users and creators, it could be disastrous for the owners of these valuable copyrights. Accordingly, the next few years will witness another round of aggressive lobbying by the film, music, and publishing industries to extend the terms of already-existing works.