Document
The document includes transcripts for Ben Newton's audio.Aquaculture
Early South Carolinians were dependent on streams, rivers, and marshes for their survival. Hunting, oyster harvesting, clamming, and fishing were vital activities as small communities developed throughout the state. While enjoyed as a leisure activity by many today, hunting and fishing were ways to supplement a diet heavy on starches, vegetables, and domestic livestock. The success of these early endeavors depended on a combination of skill and the availability of proper equipment. Now appreciated for their artistic value, many traditional forms of folk art were used for very practical purposes. Split-oak fish trap baskets, hand-woven cast nets, wooden swamp boats, and elaborately decorated duck decoys all combine function with aesthetic sensibility.
Content is provided by McKissick Museum, University of South Carolina.
Within this Series
Audio
Ben Newton on the reasons why swamp boats are made the size that they are.Audio
Stories of how J.L. Green and his friends caught alligators to make hash.Audio
Swamp boats/Flat bottom boats can be made to a variety of specifications.Document
Ahrens, Pat All Male Chorus of Blacksburg Arnold, Mac Ayers, Sara Basket, Nancy Baylor, Amos Bellow, Roger Bennett, Mary Jane Benson, JD Blackwell, Richard Boggs, Horatio Manning Bollack, James Booker...