PLANTATION SKETCHES. by Devereux, Margaret (1824-1910)

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PLANTATION SKETCHES.

Edition: First printing.

Cambridge, Massachusetts: The Riverside Press, (1906). Hardcover first edition - An uncommon collection of stories of plantation life in the old South, written by a Raleigh woman whose family owned eight large plantations in North Carolina and "between fifteen and sixteen hundred negroes." Written when she was past 65, these stories were originally not intended for publication, but meant to be passed down to her grandchildren because she did not want them to be "led into the misconception held by some that Southern planters and slaveholders were cruel despots and that the life of the negro slaves on the plantation was one of misery and sorrow." After these original comments, she is careful to always refer to the "servants" even when deploring their ignorance. The topics include Plantation Life, Going to the Plantation, My Own Early Home, The Hog-Feeder's Day (in which an elderly slave is almost lynched but when the truth comes out at the last minute, and he is instead offered his freedom for his loyalty, he turns it down), and War Reminiscences. Edited by Arthur Winslow. Frontispiece portrait of "Mammy" with tissue guard. 1x, 169 pp.

Condition: Very good in dark green cloth with gold lettering on spine and front cover. Ownership name of John Devereux Winslow (the son of the editor), dated Boston 1906.

Book ID: 87949
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