A New Look at Race and Economics Gene Dattel grew up in the cotton area of the Mississippi Delta, studied history at Yale and law at Vanderbilt before a twenty-year career in financial capital markets. He has long been interested in the role of the cotton economy in influencing racial ...
Dr. Davis reviews the book Cultivating Race: The Expansion of Slavery in Georgia, 1750 - 1860 by Wat...
Adam Rothman is an associate professor of history at Georgetown University, where he teaches courses...
Episodes of labor-saving technological change and rural urban migration have become universal patter...
Cotton’s Effect on the Southern Political Economy This excellent book begins by emphasizing the...
From the cotton gin until World War II, the pace of economic expansion in the American South was pri...
This paper seeks to make clear the root of the American Civil War- economic problems. And in the mea...
The objective of this paper is to make the case that the United States became an economic super-powe...
This is an episode of Southern cotton kingdom across the antebellum and postbellum periods. The stud...
The American South and the market Two scholars take on economic history Both David Carlton and Pet...
King Cotton and the Transportation Revolution This book is the first in-depth analysis of the relati...
Until quite recently, most of what we knew about antebellum slavery and the African-American experie...
Michael S. Frawley is asking us to do some fresh thinking about the late antebellum economy of the G...
How did the Civil War and the emancipation of four million slaves reconfigure the natural landscape ...
Economics and the Confederacy Could it be that the strong central state of the twentieth century—p...
The dismal science and American slavery 19th century analysis of King Cotton For decades, histori...
Dr. Davis reviews the book Cultivating Race: The Expansion of Slavery in Georgia, 1750 - 1860 by Wat...
Adam Rothman is an associate professor of history at Georgetown University, where he teaches courses...
Episodes of labor-saving technological change and rural urban migration have become universal patter...
Cotton’s Effect on the Southern Political Economy This excellent book begins by emphasizing the...
From the cotton gin until World War II, the pace of economic expansion in the American South was pri...
This paper seeks to make clear the root of the American Civil War- economic problems. And in the mea...
The objective of this paper is to make the case that the United States became an economic super-powe...
This is an episode of Southern cotton kingdom across the antebellum and postbellum periods. The stud...
The American South and the market Two scholars take on economic history Both David Carlton and Pet...
King Cotton and the Transportation Revolution This book is the first in-depth analysis of the relati...
Until quite recently, most of what we knew about antebellum slavery and the African-American experie...
Michael S. Frawley is asking us to do some fresh thinking about the late antebellum economy of the G...
How did the Civil War and the emancipation of four million slaves reconfigure the natural landscape ...
Economics and the Confederacy Could it be that the strong central state of the twentieth century—p...
The dismal science and American slavery 19th century analysis of King Cotton For decades, histori...
Dr. Davis reviews the book Cultivating Race: The Expansion of Slavery in Georgia, 1750 - 1860 by Wat...
Adam Rothman is an associate professor of history at Georgetown University, where he teaches courses...
Episodes of labor-saving technological change and rural urban migration have become universal patter...