You have not been recognized as a subscriber to JAH online. About 220 words from this article are provided below; about 352 words remain.
 
If you are a individual member of the Organization of American Historians, you may:
• login here if you have already registered for online access.
• Or if you're already logged in register your subscription.
• Set up your online account for the first time.

If you are not a member of the Organization of American Historians, you can:
• Join the OAH and receive many member benefits including print and electronic issues of the Journal of American History.
• Purchase a research pass to gain two-hour access to the entire History Cooperative web site. You will have full access to current issues of the Journal of American History (86.1-present). Note: the Research Pass does not provide access to JSTOR's holdings of the Journal of American History.

Instititutions can:
•  Subscribe to this journal and receive print and electronic issues.
• Activate your existing subscription so that we recognize your IP number ranges.
Shearer Davis Bowman | Book Review | The Journal of American History, 87.4 | The History Cooperative
87.4  
Journals link Search link Partners link Information link
March, 2001
 
The Journal of American History

Table of contents
List journal issues
Home
Get a printer-friendly version of this page
 
 


Book Review



Rice Gold: James Hamilton Couper and Plantation Life on the Georgia Coast. By James E. Bagwell. (Macon: Mercer University Press, 2000. xx, 193 pp. $27.95, ISBN 0-86554-651-7.)

A good rule of thumb for academic biographers is to avoid both undue hostility and excessive partiality toward their subjects. James E. Bagwell, a professor of history at Georgia Southwestern State University, has written an informative biography that will strike some readers as a bit too celebratory. His subject is an antebellum grandee and scientific agriculturist of Sea Island, Georgia, the eldest son of an indentured servant from Scotland who achieved mercantile affluence. The reader is told that James Hamilton Couper (1794–1866) illustrated "in the highest degree the best type of antebellum Southern society," particularly "the qualities of honor, integrity, morality, and noblesse oblige so characteristic of genteel classes everywhere." In the early 1850s, when a moderate Whig opposed to secession, Couper owned four plantations and approximately 1,500 slaves in the Altamaha River delta and on St. Simon's Island. Bagwell's biography is at its best when explicating Couper's detailed agricultural records to provide a clear account of his complex agricultural operations and crop rotations, including his transformation of Hopeton Plantation from a diversified farm raising Sea Island cotton, sugarcane, and rice into an estate where rice was the dominant crop. . . .


There are about 352 more words in this article. Please log in (or, if you are not yet an authorized user, please go to the User Setup page) to gain full access rights. Or if you're already logged in register your subscription.