How Cassandra Met Pat | Walter Edgar's Journal
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Cassandra King recalls how she first met Pat Conroy, and how their friendship led to marriage.Audio
Cassandra King recalls how she first met Pat Conroy, and how their friendship led to marriage.Video
By 1800, Georgetown was known as the land where planters all made fortunes with rice plantations. In 1839, Georgetown alone produced nearly half of America's Rice.Video
The Allstons, and the Manigaults, were prominent and wealthy plantation owners back in the 1800s.Video
From May until November, white plantation owners moved further in-land, in order to escape the "country fever" diseases, such as Malaria and Cholera. Those two diseases took a heavy toll on the human...Video
Several dangers to rice crops included hurricanes, floods from the mountains, and swollen rivers. Damage ranged from minor, to total devastation. Animals, such as rice weevils, crows, and ducks, also...Video
Plantation owners demanded more than just obedience from their slaves. They also demanded things like loyalty, respect, love, and duty. Whippings, and solitary confinement, were common punishments for...Video
"Carolina Gold" was considered the favored variety of rice. This clip describes how the colonial economy boomed as a result of rice.Video
The "Slave Task System" was a widely adopted system in which each worker would have a set of tasks to complete on a daily basis.Video
Planters made the transition from swamp based rice-growing, to using tidal irrigation. With tidal irrigation, planters used a series of dikes and dams to control the flow of water into rice fields.Video
An essay called "The Successful Planter," published in 1832, outlined a system of every day life for slaves living on plantations. State law in the 1830s forbade the education of slaves, but many...