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Wood Basket of the World: Lumbering, Commerce, and Conservation in South Carolina’s Forests: List of Illustrations

Wood Basket of the World: Lumbering, Commerce, and Conservation in South Carolina’s Forests
List of Illustrations
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Notes

table of contents
  1. Cover Page
  2. Halftitle Page
  3. Title Page
  4. Copyright Page
  5. Contents
  6. List of Illustrations
    1. Figures
    2. Tables
  7. Editors’ Preface
  8. Introduction
    1. Notes
  9. Chapter 1: “A Town of Their Own”
    1. Along the Santee River
    2. Southern Lumber, Black Labor
    3. “The Gentle Art of Going Without”
    4. Conclusion
    5. Notes
  10. Chapter 2: Expert Adviser
    1. Early Forest Conservation in South Carolina, 1900–1922
    2. Women’s Leadership in Progressive-Era Conservation
    3. Opposition to Early Forest Conservation in South Carolina
    4. Daisy Priscilla Smith Edgerton’s Professional Life, 1890–1922
    5. Governor Wilson G. Harvey
    6. Edgerton’s Influence on South Carolina Forest Conservation, 1922–23
    7. Conclusion
    8. Notes
  11. Chapter 3: “A Question of Community Salvation”
    1. Big Lumber’s Big Start
    2. The Trees
    3. O. L. Williams and Chester F. Korn Arrive
    4. Planning Industrial Sumter
    5. South Carolina’s High Point?
    6. Funds for the Furniture Factory
    7. Becoming Williams Furniture
    8. Brooklyn Cooperage and Galloway-Pease
    9. Sumter’s “Largest and Most Important Industrial Enterprise”
    10. Galloway-Pease Arrives
    11. The Workers and Their Communities
    12. The Great Depression
    13. There Goes the Neighborhood
    14. Brooklyn Cooperage’s Ties to Santee-Cooper
    15. Sumter’s Wood Products Post–WWII
    16. Conclusion
    17. Notes
  12. Chapter 4: Poinsett State Park
    1. Overview of the Civilian Conservation Corps
      1. Race in the CCC
      2. The End of the CCC
    2. The Civilian Conservation Corps in South Carolina
      1. SC State Park System
      2. CCC Forestry Education in South Carolina
    3. The Origin of Poinsett State Park
      1. History in the High Hills
      2. Poinsett State Park Proposal
    4. Poinsett State Park Development
      1. Company 421
    5. Camp Life at Poinsett State Park
      1. Education
      2. Athletics
      3. Social Life
      4. Company 4475
      5. Company 2413
      6. Poinsett State Park Opens
    6. The Impact of Poinsett State Park
      1. Conservation at Poinsett
      2. Environmental Education
    7. Conclusion
    8. Notes
  13. Chapter 5: An Independent Force for Change
    1. Beginnings
    2. Logging by Rail and Road
    3. The Growth Years
    4. Industry Leadership and the Question of Wood Supply
    5. Confronting the Environmental Movement
    6. Takeover
    7. Aftermath
    8. Legacy of Holly Hill Lumber Company
    9. Notes
  14. Chapter 6: Conservation in Four Holes Swamp
    1. Four Holes’s Past
    2. Norman Brunswig’s Early Years at Beidler Forest
    3. Inspiring the Public
    4. Expanding Conservation in Four Holes Swamp
    5. Brunswig’s Legacy
    6. Notes
  15. Chapter 7: “Redwoods of the East”
    1. Harry Hampton and the Origins of the Congaree Preservation Movement, 1930–59
    2. Ecology, Preservation, and the National Park Service
    3. Congaree Action Now! Student Activists in the 1970s Campaign
    4. The Politics of History and Memory in the Swamp
    5. Notes
  16. Chapter 8: Seven Hours of the Santee Cooper Century
    1. Corridors
    2. Memory Is an Action Word
    3. Accelerating Through the Santee Cooper Century
    4. The Santee Cooper Barrier
    5. Beyond the Bridges, Behind the Pine Curtains
    6. The Outdoors as Historical Source
    7. The Palmetto Trail of Sand
    8. Small Towns and Community
    9. Eutawville
    10. Witness Trees
    11. The Ditch as Archive
    12. The Edge
    13. Darkness
    14. Notes
  17. Afterword
  18. Acknowledgments
  19. Contributors
  20. Index

List of Illustrations

Figures

  1. I.1 Remnant of a cypress log
  2. 1.1 Postcard of Ferguson’s industrial core
  3. 1.2 Map showing Santee River, Santee Swamp, and town of Ferguson
  4. 1.3 Partially submerged structures of the former lumber town of Ferguson
  5. 2.1 Daisy Smith in 1893
  6. 2.2 Daisy Edgerton
  7. 2.3 Edgerton, ca. 1930s
  8. 2.4 Edgerton at the end of her career
  9. 3.1 Stylized 1908 letterhead for the SRCLC
  10. 3.2 Timber cut for Williams Furniture Corporation
  11. 3.3 Lecoq Studios’ photograph of a 1929 Sumter Board of Trade display
  12. 3.4 Devastation wrought by land clearing, Santee Cooper project
  13. 3.5 Williams Furniture workers, 1967
  14. 4.1 Poinsett State Park General Development Plan, 1938
  15. 4.2 Poinsett State Park, South Carolina
  16. 4.3 Swimming at Poinsett State Park, ca. 1940
  17. 4.4 Public Relations—South Carolina, 1940
  18. 6.1 Norman Brunswig in the early days of Francis Beidler Forest
  19. 6.2 The boardwalk at Francis Beidler Forest
  20. 6.3 Norman Brunswig speaking at the fiftieth anniversary, 2024
  21. 7.1 The Congaree Visitor Center honoring Harry R. E. Hampton
  22. 7.2 Harry Hampton standing by ancient cypress tree
  23. 7.3 Congaree Action Now! Pamphlet, 1975
  24. 8.1 Santee Cooper landscape in transition, March 1941
  25. 8.2 Clock stuck in Santee Cooper’s sands in March 1941
  26. 8.3 Fire-managed pine lands divided by a sand road
  27. 8.4 Moss-draped oaks bending away from a fence line
  28. 8.5 The “Witness Tree”
  29. 8.6 Fredcon Road
  30. 8.7 The road, the edge, and the ditch

Tables

  1. 2.1 Present at the Forestry Congress, October 10, 1922
  2. 2.2 Founding members of the First South Carolina Forestry Association, November 3, 1922

Annotate

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