Southern Shepherds, Savage Wolves
Presbyterian Domestic Missionaries and Race in South Carolina, 1802–1874
Presbyterian Church missionaries and the theology of race, enslavement, and Native American removal
In Southern Shepherds, Savage Wolves, Otis Westbrook Pickett Sr. examines Presbyterian missionaries' attempts to live up to their understood calling from their God to serve as shepherds for their congregations. These missionaries, Pickett finds, faltered in this duty when faced with the racial hierarchy of an enslaved society. He focuses on individual missionaries, most prominently John Lafayette Girardeau and T. C. Stuart, who attempted to integrate enslaved, and later freed, men and women into the church. By examining these missionaries and mission churches, Pickett sheds new light not only on the complicated role that religion played in shaping slavery and Native American removal in the US South but also the fate of these ideas in the crucible of the Civil War and its aftermath.
Table of Contents
Metadata
- rights
© 2025 University of South Carolina
The publication of this book, as well as its inclusion in the Open Carolina collection, received generous funding support from The Division of Research and the Clemson Libraries at Clemson University
The Open Carolina collection is made possible by the generous funding of the University of South Carolina Libraries.
- container titleSouthern Shepherds, Savage Wolves: Presbyterian Domestic Missionaries and Race in South Carolina, 1802–1874
- isbn978-1-64336-638-8
- publisherUniversity of South Carolina Press
- publisher placeColumbia, SC
- restrictionsThe text of this book is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives 4.0. International (CC BY- NC- ND 4.0) license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
- rights holderUniversity of South Carolina
- doi