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Florida's Peace River Frontier Edgar Canter Brown

Florida's Peace River Frontier By Edgar Canter Brown

Florida's Peace River Frontier by Edgar Canter Brown


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Florida's Peace River Frontier Summary

Florida's Peace River Frontier by Edgar Canter Brown

The economic, social, political, and racial history of southwest Florida in the nineteenth century

For most of the nineteenth century, southwest Florida and the Peace River Valley remained a frontier as unknown to outsiders as the frontiers of the American West. In this book, Canter Brown, Jr. records the area's economic, social, political, and racial history in an account of violence, passion, struggle, sacrifice, and determination.

The Peace River originates in Polk County's Lake Hamilton, one of the many lakes that dot the heart of interior Florida. It flows past the towns of Bartow, Fort Meade, Bowling Green, Arcadia, Fort Ogden, and Punta Gorda, finally meeting the sea at Charlotte Harbor on Florida's southwest Gulf Coast. No great cities line its banks; no commerce passes along its waters. Still, the river has bent and molded events of lasting significance to Florida and to the nation.

Using such primary materials as government records, manuscript collections, and newspapers published throughout the country, Brown documents the presence of Native Americans and African Americans in the area in the aftermath of the First Seminole War. He examines the Civil War and Reconstruction periods, paying particular attention to the Union/Confederate, Republican/Democratic split among the area's residents. In the final sections of the book he describes the arrival of the railroad and the growth of towns, the phosphate boom, and consequences of the Great Freeze of 1895.

Throughout this account, the author identifies by name hundreds of persons who participated in these events, believing, he says, that the stories of individuals and families are a vital part of the area's history. Florida's Peace River Frontier will appeal to readers interested in Florida history, the Civil War and Reconstruction eras, African American history, and the history of the American frontier.

Florida's Peace River Frontier Reviews

A major contribution to Florida history.-Orlando Sentinel

A sprawling chronicle of the nineteenth-century American frontier.-Journal of American History

An excellent contribution to the growing literature of the state's local history.-Journal of Southern History

Brown . . . combines a homebred love of the Peace River valley with a tenacious work ethic to find new documentation and recast old assumptions about the neglected region. . . . A study that likely will define the Peace River region for decades to come.-Florida Historical Quarterly

About Edgar Canter Brown

Canter Brown, Jr., retired professor of history and political science at Fort Valley State University, is the author or coauthor of several books, including For a Great and Grand Purpose: The Beginnings of the AMEZ Church in Florida, 1864-1905 and Mary Edwards Bryan: Her Early Life and Works.

Additional information

NGR9780813080604
9780813080604
0813080606
Florida's Peace River Frontier by Edgar Canter Brown
New
Paperback
University Press of Florida
2024-03-05
483
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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Customer Reviews - Florida's Peace River Frontier