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Tokens of Affection: The Letters of a Planter's Daughter in the Old South
Contributor(s): Bryan, Maria (Author), Bleser, Carol K. (Editor)
ISBN: 0820317276     ISBN-13: 9780820317274
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
OUR PRICE:   $53.15  
Product Type: Hardcover
Published: April 1996
Qty:
Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Annotation: This collection comprises all of the known letters written by Maria Bryan (1803-44) of Mt. Zion, Georgia, to her sister Julia Bryan Cumming of Augusta. Spanning a period from the mid-1820s to the mid-1840s, the letters relate firsthand the daily affairs and concerns of a planter's daughter on a moderately successful plantation in Hancock County, the heart of what was then the greatest cotton growing region in the world. A refined and remarkably well-educated woman, Maria Bryan began corresponding with her sister when she was sixteen years old. As Carol Bleser points out in her introduction, Bryan travels, reads the popular books of the day, entertains visitors, and makes social calls. At the same time, however, notes Bleser, Bryan's letters belie popular notions about the privileged lives of "typical" planters' daughters in the antebellum South, for she also works at housekeeping, tends the sick at home and in the neighborhood, makes clothes for the family's slaves, and tutors younger siblings. Bryan's letters keep her sister abreast of local news and gossip (a preacher who can no longer hide that he is suffering from a venereal disease) and family rifts and reconciliations (a brother's apparently severe depression and consequent aimlessness in life and career). They also contain a number of references to the family's slaves. In one letter only, however, did she reveal any feelings about the institution itself. Writing in January 1827 that their overseer had punished her personal slave, Jenny, for not meeting her quota of spinning, Bryan told her sister, "It would have distressed you to see her face bloody and swelled. Oh how great an evil is slavery".
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- History | United States - 19th Century
- Social Science | Women's Studies
- Biography & Autobiography | Women
Dewey: 975.803
LCCN: 94040961
Series: Southern Voices from the Past (Hardcover)
Physical Information: 1.36" H x 6.37" W x 9.32" (1.72 lbs) 444 pages
Themes:
- Cultural Region - Southeast U.S.
- Geographic Orientation - Georgia
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

This collection comprises all of the known letters written by Maria Bryan (1808-1844) of Mt. Zion, Georgia, to her sister Julia Bryan Cumming of Augusta. Spanning a period from the mid-1820s to the mid-1840s, the letters relate firsthand the daily affairs and concerns of a planter's daughter on a moderately successful plantation in Hancock County, the heart of what was then the greatest cotton-growing region in the world. Few such accounts exist, especially by women, of this period of southern history, when the region was flourishing as a cotton kingdom and sectional tensions had not yet dominated everyone's thoughts.

A refined and remarkably well-educated woman, Maria Bryan began corresponding with her sister when she was sixteen years old, two weeks after Julia had married and moved seventy-five miles away to Augusta, at the time Georgia's third-largest city. As Carol K. Bleser points out in her introduction, Bryan travels, reads the popular books of the day, entertains visitors, and makes social calls. At the same time, however, notes Bleser, Bryan's letters belie popular notions about the privileged lives of "typical" planters' daughters in the antebellum South, for she also works at housekeeping, tends the sick at home and in the neighborhood, makes clothes for the family's slaves, and tutors younger siblings.

Bryan's letters keep her sister abreast of local news and gossip (a preacher who can no longer hide that he is suffering from a venereal disease) and family rifts and reconciliations (a brother's apparently severe depression and consequent aimlessness in life and career). They also contain a number of references to the family's slaves. In one letter only, however, did she reveal any feelings about the institution itself. Writing in January 1827 that their overseer had punished her personal slave, Jenny, for not meeting her quota of spinning, Bryan told her sister, "It would have distressed you to see her face bloody and swelled. Oh how great an evil is slavery."

Constituting a remarkable portrait of daily life in the Old South, these letters reveal a wealth of information, and attitudes about romance, courtship, marriage, family life, childbirth, child-rearing, friendship, religion, sickness, home remedies, death, books, fashion, travel, education, politics, and social events.


Contributor Bio(s): Bleser, Carol K.: - CAROL K. BLESER was Kathryn and Calhoun Lemon Distinguished Professor of History at Clemson University, and series editor for Southern Voices from the Past: Women's Letters, Diaries, and Writings. Her books include In Joy and Sorrow: Women, Family and Marriage in the Victorian South, 1830-1900, Secret and Sacred; The Diaries of James Henry Hammond, A Southern Slaveholder, and The Hammonds of Redcliffe.