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Proprietary Records of South Carolina: (Abstracts of the Records of the Secretary of the Province, 1675-1695)
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Product Details
Author:
Harriott Cheves Leland, Susan Baldwin Bates
Format:
Paperback
Pages:
200
Publisher:
Arcadia Publishing Inc. (January 6, 2005)
Language:
English
Audience:
General/trade
ISBN-13:
9781596290433
Weight:
14.72oz
Dimensions:
6.1" x 0.375" x 0.31"
Case Pack:
40
File:
-arcadia_onix-2016-0531-20160531.xml
As low as:
$19.24
Publisher Identifier:
P-ARCA
Discount Code:
A
Pub Discount:
65
Overview
The settlers that inhabited South Carolina in the second half of the seventeenth century led lives that few in the Palmetto State today could recognize. Their land sat on the margin of a vast, largely unexplored continent, and the events and transactions that figured prominently in their daily lives reflect a frontier milieu that is both fascinating and historically significant.
This book—a compilation of abstracts from the record book kept by the Secretary of the Province of South Carolina from 1675 to 1695—is an intriguing look into the inner workings of the fledgling colony. Family relationships, marriages, surnames, and the death dates of many colonists are made available to a wide audience for the first time here. Included is information illuminating the lives and social histories of masters, servants, slaves, Indians and women.
Estate records, ships’ manifests, inventories, apprenticeships and indentures are all represented. This primary-source material will be a boon for genealogists and historians, and a treasure for descendants and other readers alike. Editors Harriot Cheves Leland and Susan Baldwin Bates, through their exhaustive research, impart a bevy of genealogical data that will help to shed light on the history of many lines and families. Nowhere else can readers find such a wealth of information and insight into the personal lives of the first settlers of what would become South Carolina.
This book—a compilation of abstracts from the record book kept by the Secretary of the Province of South Carolina from 1675 to 1695—is an intriguing look into the inner workings of the fledgling colony. Family relationships, marriages, surnames, and the death dates of many colonists are made available to a wide audience for the first time here. Included is information illuminating the lives and social histories of masters, servants, slaves, Indians and women.
Estate records, ships’ manifests, inventories, apprenticeships and indentures are all represented. This primary-source material will be a boon for genealogists and historians, and a treasure for descendants and other readers alike. Editors Harriot Cheves Leland and Susan Baldwin Bates, through their exhaustive research, impart a bevy of genealogical data that will help to shed light on the history of many lines and families. Nowhere else can readers find such a wealth of information and insight into the personal lives of the first settlers of what would become South Carolina.








