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Collection Reference Number GLC05959.11.03
From Archive Folder Editions of the Southern Cultivator 
Title Southern cultivator. [Vol. 20, no. 1 (January, 1862)]
Date January 1862
Author Redmond, Dennis (fl. 1856-1865)  
Additional authors Howard, C.W.
Document Type Newspapers and Magazines
Content Description The Private Soldier, Financial Crash in the North, Their Loss of National Position by the Craven Surrender of Mason & Slidell. A shift in agriculture requires corn to be an important Southern crop, while another editorial suggested that provisions be planted in place of cotton all over the South. This issue contains reports from the Southern Planters' Convention in Memphis. A number of varied responses are printed. This issue has more ads with a plea for shorter articles, with full-page spots and smaller ads.
Subjects Civil War  Military History  Confederate States of America  Surrender  Confederate General or Leader  Trent Affair  Global History and Civics  Foreign Affairs  Economics  Finance  Agriculture and Animal Husbandry  Cotton  
People Redmond, Dennis (fl. 1856-1865)  
Place written Augusta, Georgia
Theme The American Civil War; Foreign Affairs
Sub-collection American Civil War Newspapers and Magazines
Additional Information During the Civil War the railroad through Augusta connected the eastern and western Confederates. In spite of a 50% literacy rate in the South, Georgia's agricultural press was renowned and quite progressive. By 1860 there were five agricultural journals published in Georgia; the Southern Cultivator, a monthly journal established in 1843 in Augusta, was one of the most respected in the nation. The Cultivator promoted the formation of active agricultural societies and urged mixed husbandry. The journal also printed examples of the growth of many bureaucratic ideas. James Camak developed the Southern Cultivator. Dennis Redmond, an indigo farmer, and Rev. C.W. Howard, edited the Cultivator during 1861. By 1862, Redmond was the editor and publisher, with an editorial department consisting of Howard, Dr. M.W. Philips, William N. White, and Robert Nelson. In 1864, the editors are listed as Redmond and White. Later William Louis Jones (1827-1914) purchased the paper with his father in 1866 and acted as editor. A professor of science and agriculture at the University of Georgia, he also edited Henry W. Grady's Southern Farm and was the first director of the Georgia Agricultural Experiment Station. He sold the paper in 1881, although he continued to write a monthly column until 1884.
Copyright The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
Module Civil War, Reconstruction and the Modern Era: 1860-1945