Enslaved Native Americans and the Making of Colonial South Carolina

Enslaved Native Americans and the Making of Colonial South Carolina book cover

Enslaved Native Americans and the Making of Colonial South Carolina

Author(s): D. Andrew Johnson (Author)

  • Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
  • Publication Date: September 17, 2024
  • Language: English
  • Print length: 240 pages
  • ISBN-10: 1421449803
  • ISBN-13: 9781421449807

Book Description

A compelling study into the history and lasting influence of enslaved Native people in early South Carolina.

Finalist of the George C. Rogers Jr Award by the South Carolina Historical Society

In 1708, the governor of South Carolina responded to a request from London to describe the population of the colony. This response included an often-overlooked segment of the population: Native Americans, who made up one-fourth of all enslaved people in the colony. Yet it was not long before these descriptions of enslaved Native people all but disappeared from the archive.

In Enslaved Native Americans and the Making of Colonial South Carolina, D. Andrew Johnson argues that Native people were crucial to the development of South Carolina’s economy and culture. By meticulously scouring documentary sources and creating a database of over 15,000 mentions of enslaved people, Johnson uses a uniquely interdisciplinary approach to reconsider the history of South Carolina and center the enslaved Native people who were forced to live and work on its plantations. Johnson also employs spatial analysis and examines archaeological evidence to study Native slavery in a plantation context.

Although much of their impact is absent from the historical record, Native people’s influence persisted: in the specific technologies they brought to the plantations where they were enslaved; in the development of Creole culture; and in the wealth and power of the founders and early leaders of the colony. This book is an important corrective to our understanding of the colonization and development of South Carolina. By focusing on the Native minority of the enslaved population, Johnson recasts the colonial history of America, uncovering the importance of enslaved Native people to the colonial project and the complex historical connections between race and slavery.

Editorial Reviews

Review

This perceptive study shows connections between notable events often seen as disparate. It will appeal to specialists who wish to learn how this ‘Other Slavery’ shaped the complex relations between English settlers, Native people and Africans and the evolution of early South Carolina in the Atlantic world.
―Bernard E. Powers, Jr.,
Post and Courier

This study offers an important and much needed contribution to the field. Johnson carefully mines the fractured colonial archives and weaves together the histories of Indigenous and African enslavement in the American South, telling new stories that center Native women’s labor, knowledge, and experiences.
―Alejandra Dubcovsky, University of California, Riverside

A deeply researched and lucidly presented study of indigenous enslavement. Andrew Johnson locates the enslaved at ground level―where they lived and worked―documenting how Native labor immensely shaped the plantation regime of South Carolina, especially through provisioning. A book of signal importance for assessing the significance of indigenous enslavement in the larger Atlantic World.
―Alan Gallay, Texas Christian University

Johnson does an admirable job with the extant documents and fills in the archival gaps and silences with archaeological evidence and various anthropological and ethnohistorical practices….In Enslaved Native Americans and the Making of Colonial South Carolina, Johnson has taken on an extremely difficult task, approached it with sound research and sophisticated interpretive frameworks, and accomplished something remarkable.
American Historical Review

Johnson’s quantitative approach helps him discern important demographic trends in Carolina colonists’ enslavement of Native Americans….[Enslaved Native Americans and the Making of Colonial South Carolina] does more than show that Native people bolstered the enslaved population of South Carolina. Johnson also reveals that they were essential to the colony’s development of what he calls the “maize and pease complex”, which he defines as the planting of corn alongside one of several species of beans––food that planters used to provision the colony.
William and Mary Quarterly

Book Description

A compelling study into the history and lasting influence of enslaved Native people in early South Carolina.

View on Amazon

电子书代发PDF格式价格30我要求助
未经允许不得转载:Wow! eBook » Enslaved Native Americans and the Making of Colonial South Carolina