When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Colonial history of Missouri - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colonial_history_of_Missouri

    Missouri Historical Review (1956) 50#3 pp 235–47. Gitlin, Jay. The bourgeois frontier: French towns, French traders, and American expansion (Yale University Press, 2009) Houck, Louis. History of Missouri, Vol. 1.: From the Earliest Explorations and Settlements until the Admission of the State into the Union (3 vol 1908) online v 1; online v2;

  3. History of agriculture in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_agriculture_in...

    Sawers (2005) shows how southern farmers made the mule their preferred draft animal in the South during the 1860s–1920s, primarily because it fit better with the region's geography. Mules better withstood the heat of summer, and their smaller size and hooves were well suited for such crops as cotton, tobacco, and sugar.

  4. Negro cloth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Negro_cloth

    "Superior American Negro Cloths" advertised in a Charleston, South Carolina newspaper in 1826. Negro cloth or Lowell cloth was a coarse and strong cloth used for slaves' clothing in the West Indies and the Southern Colonies. [1] [2] [3] The cloth was imported from Europe (primarily Wales) in the 18th and 19th centuries. [4] [5]

  5. Plain Folk of the Old South - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plain_Folk_of_the_Old_South

    Plain Folk of the Old South is a 1949 book by American Vanderbilt University historian Frank Lawrence Owsley, one of the Southern Agrarians. In it he used statistical data to analyze the makeup of Southern United States of America society, contending that yeoman farmers made up a larger middle class than was generally thought.

  6. History of Missouri - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Missouri

    This same year, the first Missouri constitution was adopted. The following year, 1821, Missouri was admitted as the 24th state, with the state capital temporarily located in Saint Charles until a permanent capital could be built. Missouri was the first state entirely west of the Mississippi River to be admitted to the Union

  7. Feed sack dress - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feed_sack_dress

    As early as 1890 the first osnaburg sacks were recycled on farms to be used as toweling, rags, or other functional uses on farms. [2] [4] A paragraph in a short story in an 1892 issue of Arthurs Home Magazine said, "So, that is the secret of how baby looked so lovely in her flour sack: just a little care, patience and ingenuity on the mother's part."

  8. Hopewell tradition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hopewell_tradition

    The Montane Hopewell on the Tygart Valley area, an upper branch of the Monongahela River of northern West Virginia, is similar to Armstrong. The pottery and cultural characteristics are also similar to late Ohio Hopewell. [20] They occurred during the neighboring Watson through Buck Garden periods of peoples to the south and westerly in the state.

  9. Plantation complexes in the Southern United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plantation_complexes_in...

    Although many Southern farmers did enslave people before emancipation in 1862, few enslaved more than five. These farmers tended to work the fields alongside the people they enslaved. [ 5 ] Of the estimated 46,200 plantations existing in 1860, 20,700 had 20 to 30 enslaved people and 2,300 had a workforce of a hundred or more, with the rest ...