The Short Life of Free Georgia: Class and Slavery in the Colonial South

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Management number 233460893 Release Date 2026/06/27 List Price US$9.07 Model Number 233460893
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For twenty years in the eighteenth century, Georgia — the last British colony in what became the United States — enjoyed a brief period of free labor, where workers were not enslaved and were paid. The Trustees for the Establishment of the Colony of Georgia created a “Georgia experiment” of philanthropic enterprise and moral reform for poor white workers, though rebellious settlers were more interested in shaking off the British social system of deference to the upper class. Only a few elites in the colony actually desired the slave system, but those men, backed by expansionist South Carolina planters, used the laborers' demands for high wages as examples of societal unrest. Through a campaign of disinformation in London, they argued for slavery, eventually convincing the Trustees to abandon their experiment.In The Short Life of Free Georgia, Noeleen McIlvenna chronicles the years between 1732 and 1752 and challenges the conventional view that Georgia’s colonial purpose was based on unworkable assumptions and utopian ideals. Rather, Georgia largely succeeded in its goals — until self-interested parties convinced England that Georgia had failed, leading to the colony’s transformation into a replica of slaveholding South Carolina. Read more

ISBN10 1469624036
ISBN13 978-1469624037
Edition Illustrated
Language English
Publisher The University of North Carolina Press
Dimensions 6.13 x 0.4 x 9.25 inches
Item Weight 8.8 ounces
Print length 158 pages
Publication date October 26, 2015

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