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The most modern tools of social history are used to examine the phenomenon of the Lower Cape Fear colony in North Carolina. First settled in 1725, within half a century it was the most prosperous part of the state. Bradford Wood describes the cultural and economic factors that drove the colony.

Produktbeschreibung
The most modern tools of social history are used to examine the phenomenon of the Lower Cape Fear colony in North Carolina. First settled in 1725, within half a century it was the most prosperous part of the state. Bradford Wood describes the cultural and economic factors that drove the colony.
Autorenporträt
Bradford J. Wood is an assistant professor of history at Eastern Kentucky University. He holds degrees from Johns Hopkins University, Michigan State University, and Wake Forest University. Born in Charleston, West Virginia, Wood grew up in southeastern Michigan. His scholarly interests center on the history of plantation societies in colonial British America. Wood's manuscript for This Remote Part of the World won the Hines Prize, awarded by the College of Charleston's Carolina Lowcountry and Atlantic World Program. Wood lives in Richmond, Kentucky.