Most studies of antebellum southern society have focused on the relationships between slaveholders and their chattels or, more recently, between the plantation elite and southern yeomen. Scant attention has been paid to the social complexity of antebellum southern Cities, a situation Barbara L. Bellows helps rectify in Benevolence Among Slaveholders, her study of public assistance programs for the poor in Charleston, South Carolina, and other southern cities, from 1670 to 1860. Free-rations programs, poorhouses, and ...
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Most studies of antebellum southern society have focused on the relationships between slaveholders and their chattels or, more recently, between the plantation elite and southern yeomen. Scant attention has been paid to the social complexity of antebellum southern Cities, a situation Barbara L. Bellows helps rectify in Benevolence Among Slaveholders, her study of public assistance programs for the poor in Charleston, South Carolina, and other southern cities, from 1670 to 1860. Free-rations programs, poorhouses, and orphanages, the major forms of public welfare in urban areas, assisted the luckless, ill, and idle, but members of the working classes were also forced to turn to them for help during seasonal unemployment and economic depressions. The value of Bellows' study is twofold: first, it offers increased knowledge of the lives of the white lower classes, including their work and wage patterns and family structures; second, it provides insight into the attitudes of the urban elite who distributed public alms and sat on the boards of various charities. The form of poor relief in the South closely resembled that in the North, and indeed overseers of the poor in the South often evaluated their own efforts by comparing them with those of northern cities. Bellows finds, however, that the motivation for public benevolence differed greatly between the two regions. Unlike northern humanitarianism, which grew from a philosophical liberalism that moved northerners to scrutinize and then attempt to reform their society, the benevolence of the southern elite derived from the same set of paternalistic assumptions about the hierarchical rather than democratic nature of society that directed theirtreatment of slaves. In particular, the southern urban elite imagined that public relief could serve to create a community of obligation that would bind the interests of lower-class whites to wealthy whites rather than to the free blacks who shared their poverty. For this reason
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Seller's Description:
Fine in fine dust jacket. 1st Printing HC w/DJ, no writing, marks or tears, little discernable cover and corner wear, no remainder marks, not clipped, not ex-library. Sewn binding. Paper over boards. 217 p. Audience: General/trade.