Aaron W. Marrs challenges the accepted understanding of economic and industrial growth in antebellum America with this original study of the history of the railroad in the Old South. Drawing from both familiar and overlooked sources, such as the personal diaries of Southern travelers, papers and letters from civil engineers, corporate records, and contemporary newspaper accounts, Marrs skillfully expands on the conventional business histories that have characterized scholarship in this field. He situates railroads in the fullness of antebellum life, examining how slavery, technology, labor, social convention, and the environment shaped their evolution. Far from seeing the Old South as backward and premodern, Marrs finds evidence of urban li...
The American Revolution and its aftermath posed the greatest challenge to the institution of slavery...
Operating under an outmoded system of urban development and faced by the vicissitudes of the Civil W...
In the 1880s, Southern boosters saw the growth of industry as the only means of escaping the poverty...
The Influence of Railroads on Southern Society Given the vast scholarship on antebellum railroad...
This work examines the emergence of organizational and bureaucratic ideas in the 19th-century South....
This study concerns the organized activity of African American railroad workers in Deep South states...
Technological Advancement and Social Implications Perhaps no technology remade antebellum America mo...
The scholarship on the middle period of the 19th century in the South has prolifer-ated to such an e...
Re-examining Southern Industrial Growth Not long ago, when Robert Fogel and Stanley Engerman publish...
This brochure describes slave labor in general and in particular in building the railroad in St. Mat...
Railroad construction provided a focus for the acceleration of economic rivalry between Richmond, Pe...
In this ambitious volume the author interprets the nascent railroad labor movement of the late ninet...
Most of the debates about race relations focused on the railroads of the New South. Travel was a dif...
A Railroad That Could Have Been H. Roger Grant has written an interesting book about something that ...
As we continue to dig deeper into the Gilded Age, we begin to see the importance the railroad made f...
The American Revolution and its aftermath posed the greatest challenge to the institution of slavery...
Operating under an outmoded system of urban development and faced by the vicissitudes of the Civil W...
In the 1880s, Southern boosters saw the growth of industry as the only means of escaping the poverty...
The Influence of Railroads on Southern Society Given the vast scholarship on antebellum railroad...
This work examines the emergence of organizational and bureaucratic ideas in the 19th-century South....
This study concerns the organized activity of African American railroad workers in Deep South states...
Technological Advancement and Social Implications Perhaps no technology remade antebellum America mo...
The scholarship on the middle period of the 19th century in the South has prolifer-ated to such an e...
Re-examining Southern Industrial Growth Not long ago, when Robert Fogel and Stanley Engerman publish...
This brochure describes slave labor in general and in particular in building the railroad in St. Mat...
Railroad construction provided a focus for the acceleration of economic rivalry between Richmond, Pe...
In this ambitious volume the author interprets the nascent railroad labor movement of the late ninet...
Most of the debates about race relations focused on the railroads of the New South. Travel was a dif...
A Railroad That Could Have Been H. Roger Grant has written an interesting book about something that ...
As we continue to dig deeper into the Gilded Age, we begin to see the importance the railroad made f...
The American Revolution and its aftermath posed the greatest challenge to the institution of slavery...
Operating under an outmoded system of urban development and faced by the vicissitudes of the Civil W...
In the 1880s, Southern boosters saw the growth of industry as the only means of escaping the poverty...