Southern Cultivator

The Southern Cultivator is a defunct agrarian publication in the Southern United States.

Southern Cultivator
Founder(s)J. W. Jones
W. S. Jones
PublisherJ. P. Harrison
EditorDennis Redmond
Charles Wallace Howard
Founded1843
LanguageEnglish
Ceased publication1872
HeadquartersAugusta, Georgia

History

The journal was started by J. W. Jones and W. S. Jones in Augusta, Georgia in 1843.[1][2][3] Its publication started prior to De Bow's Review, which was established three years later, in 1846.[3] Indeed, the Southern Cultivator has been said to be "the Confederacy's oldest, strongest, and intellectually most impressive agricultural journal."[3] Its editors were Dennis Redmond and Charles Wallace Howard.[3] Its publisher was J. P. Harrison.[4]

Southern Cultivator was published twice a month.[1] After the American Civil War of 1861-1865, its offices moved to Athens, Georgia.[1] It was then moved to Atlanta.[1] It later absorbed other similar publications, including the Dixie Farmer.[1] The journal ceased publication in 1872.[5]

Content

The primary readership of the journal was Southern planters.[3] As a result, much of the content focused on agricultural matters.[3] However, it also published articles about politics, education and literature.[3] Indeed, the byline read, "Devoted to Southern Agriculture, Designed to improve the Mind, and Elevate the Characters of the Tillers of the Soil, and to Introduce a More Enlightened System of Culture.".[6]

A large number of poems written by Confederate poets were published in its pages.[3] They also described books published in the North as "evil."[3] Moreover, author Bill Arp (1823-1906) had a monthly column in the journal.[4] As the journal publisher, J. P. Harrison, also served as the publisher of Arp's books, the Southern Cultivator' also ran advertisements for those books.[4]

Among its pages, some readers also discussed the recipe of mustang wine, a wine made from mustang grapes in Texas.[7]

Digitalization

It has been digitalized by Duke University Libraries.[1] Original copies are kept at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign, Duke University, and Princeton University.[8]

gollark: https://tenor.com/view/dinosaur-terrifying-attack-roar-angry-gif-11807028
gollark: We are not.
gollark: According to the latest research this is highly unlikely.
gollark: https://tenor.com/view/clock-helvetica-falling-numbers-glitch-gif-17952481↓ Tux1's clock
gollark: Yes, this is obvious via use of apiaristic calculus.

References

  1. Duke University Libraries: Southern Cultivator
  2. WorldCat
  3. Michael T. Bernath, Confederate Minds: The Struggle for Intellectual Independence in the Civil War South: The Struggle for Intellectual Independence in the Civil War South, Chapel Hill, North Carolina: Univ of North Carolina Press, 2010, p. 86
  4. David B. Parker, Alias Bill Arp: Charles Henry Smith and the South's Goodly Heritage, Athens, Georgia: University of Georgia Press, 2009, pp. 94-95
  5. "Commercial Periodicals from the Southern U.S., 1811-1877" (PDF). EbscoHost. Retrieved 27 August 2016.
  6. Google Books
  7. Southern Cultivator, Volume 18, pp. 154-155
  8. HathiTrust
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.