The Lynches of South Carolina
eBook - ePub

The Lynches of South Carolina

From Reconstruction to Redemption

  1. English
  2. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  3. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

The Lynches of South Carolina

From Reconstruction to Redemption

About this book

In this follow-up volume to For Church and Confederacy: The Lynches of South Carolina, Robert Emmett Curran extends his corpus of work on the history of Catholicism in the South through the eyes of the Lynch family of South Carolina. An Irish American family who sympathized with the Confederacy, the Lynches rose to prominence economically and in religious leadership during the late 1800s. Curran's latest volume features a collection of personal correspondence from Lynch family members, telling the story of a family struggling to recover from the physical, financial, and emotional wreckage that the Civil War had left, while coping with the new order Reconstruction imposed upon the South.

With thirty-one chronological chapters spanning 1866 to 1882, this book of firsthand accounts fills a void in literature that treats the challenges and realities facing Irish Americans in the post–Civil War South. Each chapter begins with an orienting and engaging introduction, and a helpful family genealogy provides valuable context for readers. Offering a unique perspective on the Reconstruction, Redemption, and Gilded Age eras, The Lynch Family of South Carolina is an insightful and engaging resource for scholars of the post–Civil War era as well as those with an interest in Southern and religious history.

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Information

Year
2026
Edition
1
eBook ISBN
9798895270400

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Half-Title Page
  3. Title Page
  4. Copyright
  5. Dedication
  6. Contents
  7. Acknowledgments
  8. Abbreviations
  9. Lynch Family Genealogy
  10. Introduction
  11. Chapter 1. “Everything Starts Anew Now”: January–May 1866
  12. Chapter 2. “Practice Free, Times Hard, Money Very Scarce and Getting Scarcer”: June–December 1866
  13. Chapter 3. “In All Probability This Will Never Be a State Again but Be Part of a Kingdom”: January–June 1867
  14. Chapter 4. “You Have No Idea of the Scarcity of Money Here”: July–December 1867
  15. Chapter 5. “These Attacks I Think Indicate Consumption”: January–June 1868
  16. Chapter 6. “The Rub with Us Now Is Wether We Can Get the Necessaries of Life”: July–December 1868
  17. Chapter 7. “I Feel as if I Were in the Embrace of a Boa Constrictor”: January–June 1869
  18. Chapter 8. “Sr Borgia Believes the World Is Near Its End”: July–December 1869
  19. Chapter 9. “Rev Dr Meriwether Hopes It Is Not True You Have Not Gone for the Immediate Definition”: January–June 1870
  20. Chapter 10. “No Man Seems to Know Whether He Is Standing on His Heels or His Head”: July–December 1870
  21. Chapter 11. “How Long, O Lord, How Long?” January–June 1871
  22. Chapter 12. “It Looks Like Antebellum Times”: July–December 1871
  23. Chapter 13. “To Me It Appears More Difficult to Regain Than to Have First Gained”: January–June 1872
  24. Chapter 14. “The Idea of a Religious Invoking a Malediction on the Head of Anyone!” July–December 1872
  25. Chapter 15. “The Taxes Seem to Carry Everything Before Them!” January–June 1873
  26. Chapter 16. “Our Privations Are So Great That I Think Our Enemies Would Take Pity on Us” : July–December 1873
  27. Chapter 17. “I Am at the Mercy of Creditors”: January–June 1874
  28. Chapter 18. “The Wind Seems to Be Veering Now”: July–December 1874
  29. Chapter 19. “Our Blessed Little Angel Breathed Her Last on Monday Morning”: January–June 1875
  30. Chapter 20. “Our Poor Hearts Are Broken”: July–December 1875
  31. Chapter 21. “No One Thinks Her Converted”: January–June 1876
  32. Chapter 22. “Very Much Enthusiasm Prevails for the Success of the Democracy”: July–December 1876
  33. Chapter 23. “God Is Good!” January–June 1877
  34. Chapter 24. “Everybody Seems Pleased with the Return of Home Rule”: July–December 1877
  35. Chapter 25. “There Is No Mistake That Farming Is Ever a Failure”: January–June 1878
  36. Chapter 26. “When You Shall Live at Home, Your Diocess Will Become a Perfect Hotbed of Catholicity”: July–December 1878
  37. Chapter 27. “This Deprives Me of the Last Frail Plant I Had to Lean On for the Support of My Family”: January–June 1879
  38. Chapter 28. “Just Now Everything Looks Gloomy”: July–December 1879
  39. Chapter 29. “I Fear I Am Lost in the Labyrinth”: January–June 1880
  40. Chapter 30. “The Pope Did Not Do Right Towards Bishop Lynch”: July–December 1880
  41. Chapter 31. “The House Would Fall Down If You Had Not Been Its Prop and Support”: 1881–1882
  42. Epilogue
  43. Notes
  44. Index

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