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