Monday, September 30, 2013

Delectable

 
 
About the Book:  Montana real estate agent Quint McCoy will tell you that the most important thing is location, location, location. It's a lesson he learns all too well when he goes incommunicado for a four-week fishing trip to Alaska. While he's away, his mother Molly turns his office into the pie shop she has always dreamed of, Big Sky Pie. But that's not the only surprise in store for him.  On her way out of town, Callee McCoy only wants to say a fond farewell to her beloved mother-in-law. But Molly soon persuades Callee to stay and lend a hand at the new shop, even if it means heating up the kitchen with her soon-to-be ex. As Callee and Quint rediscover their recipe for love, they realize that some couples are so sinfully good together that one delectable taste is never enough . . .

About The Author:  Adianne Lee lives with her husband of many, many years on the beautiful Olympic Peninsula in Washington State in a pole barn building her husband transformed into an upstairs apartment with a shop below for his hot rods.  Adrianne creates her stories on her laptop, in her recliner with her adopted cat, Spooky, curled between her calves, snoozing.  over thirty years of summer vacationing in the Flathead Lake are near Kalispell and Glacier Park has given her a love for all things Montana.

My Thoughts About The Book:  I liked this book.  The story about a couple who were struggling in their marriage, who knew little about each other, who still loved each other, and the establishment of the Big Sky Pie Company was fun.  It was a light and easy read.  If you want something to read in one sitting that does not require a lot of effort than this is the book for you. 

STATEMENT OF DISCLOSURE: I received an paperback copy of this title from net Galley Publicity Group  as part of their blogger review program . I am disclosing this in accordance with the FTC 16 CFR, Part 255 'Guides concerning the use of endorsements and testimonials in advertising. I was not asked to write a positive review and all opinions expressed are entirely my own. Thanks guys for letting me read this and participate!

In Which I Got A Case of Verbal Diarrhea

"I am too old for this! Too old! This whole thing? Embarrassing!" Tommy grumbled as we walked into the Youth Center.

"It's fine," I insisted. I gave our names to the uniformed soldier sitting behind a table.

"I'm too old!" Tommy repeated for like the twentieth time. He repeats himself a lot. I didn't realize it was an autism thing. Sometimes he'll ask a question and I'll answer him and then an hour later he'll ask me the SAME question.

"You deserve a medal too," I explained.

We were at the Home Front Hero dinner that the Airman and Family Readiness Center on the military base put together for deployed families. The kids were all getting a certificate and medal for being brave while their parents were away. I found this to be an awesome thing--and even better, they were feeding us so it meant I didn't have to cook.

There were some booths set up that we checked out. Some had free books. Candy. Pens. I could always use pens. Mine always disappear. At one booth a woman handed over some bags and said, "Here's something for your children." To which Tommy immediately said, "I'm not a child! I'm 11! I'm too old for this!"

I made him apologize. He said, "I'm sorry. But I'm not a child. I'm growing up."

He made my head hurt.

He seems to think that because he's in middle school that he's no longer a kid. He explains that his voice is getting lower and that he's going through puberty. He doesn't like toys anymore--except for Legos. He's turning into a man. He tells me this multiple times a day. I inform him that he's still technically a kid until he's 18. He disagrees.

This is basically how Tommy looked during the first hour:


"Tommy!" I hissed. "You're scaring people. Stop it."

"I am too old for this!" Tommy whispered back.

He wasn't the oldest one there. An eighth grader showed up.

"Maybe Tommy needs a time out," Natalie said primly. "I'm happy." She twirled and went, "Ta-da!"

"You are the worst sister," Tommy grumbled. "I'm too OLD for this."

I looked around hoping to find some alcohol. There wasn't any. So I reached for the package of M&Ms that were passed out. I ripped it open and poured a huge amount into my mouth.

"Hey!" Natalie shouted indignantly. "That was MINE!"

I chewed. I probably had a chocolate bubble at the corner of my mouth. A Colonel walked past at that moment and did a double take. There were a lot of commanders at the dinner. I was not making the best impression. I quickly swallowed and wiped my lips.

Some important people talked. Thanked the families. Then announced that it was time to eat.


There was music playing--Disney music--so Natalie started to dance:




Her outfit looked like this by the way:


Her shirt says, "Daddy is my hero and I am his princess." I did not make this. I cannot sew. I buy my products from Etsy. You can purchase the set here.

As we were eating, a different Colonel sat down at the table. That's what the higher ups were there to do: converse with the families, make sure we haven't lost our minds, stuff like that. I had just taken a gigantic bite of roll when he sat down and introduced himself so I sat there chewing like an idiot. Then I reached out to shake his hand and I totally jabbed him with my jagged nail. He was polite about it as I apologized profusely.


And then I got a case of verbal diarrhea. When I'm nervous I start talking and then I can't stop. It's why I worry about going to a blogger convention. I'll make a fool of myself and be known as The Girl Who Won't Shut Up. I told the Colonel about missing Tom. About eating tons of chocolate. ("I've probably gained like 10 pounds, ha! Most wives are out losing weight when their husbands go and I'm stuffing my face!") About how my kids can drive me insane. ("My daughter doesn't like to listen to me but she listens at school.") The guy sat there nodding kindly. After talking his ear off I thought, "It's okay though, I'll probably never see him again. He's a COLONEL." But then he was like, "Oh, I sometimes sit in during dog certifications."

My husband works in K9 and will most likely be getting a dog when he comes back. And will need to get certified. So he will meet the Colonel who will remember his last name and say something like, "That wife of yours is a chatterbox and she clawed up my hand!"


The only reason I stopped talking was because the ceremony began. I'm sure the guy was relieved. The kids were all called up to get their certificate and medal:







Tommy seemed much happier after getting his medal.




I thought it was a fabulous thing for the base to do. I only frightened one person, so that's a plus.


"That was okay," Tommy said as we walked to our car. "But I'm not a kid anymore. Just so you know."

I sighed. "Yes. I know."


Newspaper - Runaway Slaves - Carders, Spinners, Weavers, & Knitters

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Virginia Gazette (Hunter), Williamsburg, November 7, 1754.
RAN away...a Mulatto Wench, named Molly, about 26 Years of Age, of a middle Stature, long Visage, and freckled, has a drawling Speech, a down Look, and has been chiefly brought up to Carding and Spinning.

Virginia Gazette (Dixon & Hunter),Williamsburg, March 11, 1775.
RUN away... a very bright Mulatto Man named STEPHEN, 5 Feet 6 or 7 Inches high, about 22 Years of Age...His Wife PHEBE went away with him, a remarkable white Indian Woman, about the same Age, and was with Child; she has long black Hair, which is generally clubbed, and carried off with her a blue Negro Cotton Waistcoat and Petticoat, a Virginia Cloth Waistcoat and Petticoat, and a Virginia Cloth Bonnet. She can spin well...

Virginia Gazette or American Advertiser (Hayes), Richmond, February 2, 1782.
A black fellow by the name of PETER, frequently called PETER WOOD, about 37 or 38 years of age, 5 feet 8 or 9 inches high, has a smiling countenance...Also a very likely black girl, wife to the above fellow and taken off by him, about 18 or 19 years old, middle size, by the name of AMIA...She is a fine spinner and Weaver, has never had a child, and I am informed has holes in her ears for rings.Virginia Gazette or Weekly Advertiser (Nicolson & Prentis), Richmond, May 11, 1782.
VIOLET, went off about eight weeks ago, and is now harboured in Williamsburg, about twenty two years old, very likely, genteel made, and knits very well.

Virginia Gazette and Weekly Advertiser
(Nicolson & Prentis), Richmond, November 22, 1783.
RUN away...a negro girl named PHILLIS, but for some time passed by the name BETTY. She is about sixteen years of age, an excellent spinner, and very likely...She has for some time been harboured about Rocket's, and is very intimate and supposed lives with one Free Harry.

Virginia Gazette or American Advertiser (Hayes), Richmond, October 16, 1784.
RAN AWAY...a likely Mulatto woman named CHARITY, who carried with her three children, two boys and a girl...She is a likely wench, has an uncommon good voice, is a good house servant, and can spin and knit very well.

Virginia Gazette or American Advertiser (Hayes), Richmond, December 31, 1785
....my negro woman TABB. She is of a middle stature, rather of a yellowish cast, and thin visage, straight made, walks and talks quick...When she went off, she was clothed as Negroes generally are, which she will certainly change, being very fond of dress, and looks tolerable genteel. She is remarkable handy and industrious, can card and spin cotton and wool, equal in quantity and quality with any woman in the State; a tolerable good weaver, which she followed when she runaway before, and changed her name to Nancy Jones.

Virginia Gazette and Weekly Advertiser (Nicolson), Richmond, April 17, 1788.
RUN away...a stout well made Virginia born negro woman, named DINAH, but has changed her name to NANCY, her complexion is rather of the tawny kind, she has a scar on her forehead, and keeps her eyes rather closed when speaking, she chews tobacco, and smoaks...She last hired herself to Mrs. Jones, at Spring Garden, in Hanover, for a spinner and weaver, and had one of the house servants for her husband...

Virginia Gazette and General Advertiser (Davis), Richmond, January 18, 1792.
Run away...a likely negro woman, named URSULA, of a yellowish complexion, with some black moles on her face, 30 years of age, 5 feet three or 4 inches high, had on, when she went away, such cloathing as negroes generally wear in the summer, and carried with her a white linen coat and jacket. She is a vile creature, and for her many crimes I punsihed her with an iron collar, but supposed she soon got that off. She is very artful, has a smooth tongue, and is a good weaver, and as she has for some time imposed on the Baptist church by her pretensions to religion, she may probably attempt to pass for a free woman, and do the same again.
.

About slave Jenny, the good spinster...




Robert Carter, Letter to Clement Brooke of the Baltimore Iron Works. 11 November 1776.
Description: Item is a letter and an invoice. Of interest is reference made to Jenny. The "Negroe Woman" is on board the sloop Atwell along with a host of other goods. The abstract below is from notations in the invoice and letter.

220 bushels of Indian Corn and one Negroe Woman named Jenny are no on board the Sloop Atwell the cargo mentioned abov to be delivered to you for the use of the Baltimoe [sic] Comp[any]--Pray send me a Copy of the Proceedings of the B-C[ompany] when they resolve that there Shall be an Addition of five negroe Women, to their Stock--
It is customary for me to engage my Negroes from new years day to the 31st of December following--however Geo. Wilkerson, Wool Comber, has relinquished Jenny, who is a good Spinster--Jenny is young & Stout, She has fits, accasionally, [sic] I say Accasionally, becuase her fits never happen but upon her being reprimanded for neglects; nor do those Fits leave behind any visible Effects If Jenny Should prove not to be sound, I will at a future date Send a negroe woman in her Stead--...

 From the Robert Carter Papers (Vol. III). (Virginia) Special Collections Library, Duke University.

Sunday, September 29, 2013

Gluten-Free Bread: More Than 100 Artisan Loaves for a Healthier Life by Ellen Brown Review

My mother-in-law is gluten-free.

She discovered she had celiac disease about a year ago. This means she had to give up a lot of foods that she loved.

I know she'd enjoy the book Gluten-Free Bread: More Than 100 Artisan Loaves For A Healthier Life by Ellen Brown. Why? Well, because she loves bread. When we'd go to Texas Roadhouse she'd enjoy the rolls that were served. She'd reach for the breadsticks at Olive Garden. I imagine it's extremely difficult not to be able to have those.


However, the book has many delicious recipes that she can make that are gluten-free! Also, I loved the colorful pictures that accompanied most recipes.

I liked how the book explained what things were and how they worked. For instance, it went into detail about yeast. I'm interested because I'm not exactly sure what goes into making bread. I tend to buy mine already made.



I LOVE baguettes so I was pleased to find a recipe for it:




I also am a gigantic fan of bagels.





There were so many scrumptious recipes that made me drool. I love bread. And yes, I do plan on making some of this bread when my mother-in-law comes to visit.


The author, Ellen Brown, is the author of 35 cookbooks so I know she knows her stuff! If you want a copy of the book, you can purchase it from Amazon.com here.


So if you have someone who is gluten-free in your life, or YOU are gluten-free, be sure to check out Gluten-Free Bread. Don't deny yourself the pleasure of biting into a warm loaf.


**I received a copy of the book to review in exchange for my honest opinion*

The Little Mermaid DVD Winner!

I did a giveaway for a Blu-Ray + DVD set of The Little Mermaid here.


I used random.org to pick a winner and it chose..


....number 17 which is Tj and Amy.



Congrats!



If you didn't win, try again in another giveaway. I currently have one for a Grace Unplugged prize pack here and I will have other giveaways in the future.

Grace Unplugged Prize Pack Giveaway!**CLOSED

**CLOSED! Winner posted here**



I love when I can find a wonderful family movie.

Grace Unplugged is one of those.



Here is what it is about:

Sometimes, chasing your dreams leads you right to where you belong!

Having just turned 18, Grace Trey aspires to more than just singing at her church where her father, a former pop star, is the worship leader. So, with the help of Mossy, her dad's former manager, Grace records a cover version of her dad's old Top-10 hit, runs off to Los Angeles, and begins to taste the kind of stardom she's always dreamed about.

Yet with each rung of the ladder she climbs, Grace feels more and more pressure to compromise her values, further straining her relationship with her parents. Will everything she experiences lead her to reject her faith… or rediscover it?

Grace Unplugged opens in theaters October 4 and is “Family Approved” by the Dove Foundation.

The Grace Unplugged Cast:
AJ Michalka
James Denton
Kevin Pollak
Michael Welch




Check out the app to learn more. You can find out if you're ready for the rockstar life and watch a fabulous music video by the actress who plays Grace in the movie:






A lucky reader can when the Grace Unplugged Prize Pack!




It includes the following:

• Grace Unplugged Soundtrack CD
- Songs by TobyMac, AJ Michalka, Chris Tomlin and Shawn McDonald.
• Grace Unplugged: A Novel by Melody Carlson.
• Own It: The book Discover Your Faith in God by Michael & Hayley DiMarco.
• Grace Unplugged Exclusive Guitar Pick.



Giveaway Rules:

--Must be 18 or older

--Must live in the US or Canada

--NO PO Boxes



Mandatory Entry: Take the Are You Ready For The Rockstar quiz and tell me your results!



Extra Entries:

--Tweet about the giveaway using #GraceUnplugged

--Tell me if you've ever chased a dream before!



I will run the contest until October 5th.



Good luck!!



**I was not compensated for this post. My opinions are my own**

Special Prayers

I have a few special folks I am asking special prayers for this week.  My weekend  was filled with sadness, anxiousness, and prayer, so I thought I would ask if you guys would help me out.
 
Maghen is a precious little young momma of 1 year old Jett and momma to be of twins Kruz and Kason.  On Saturday(Jett's first birthday) they had to airlift her to UAB Hospital because they feared her water had broken, there was only one heartbeat and she was in active labor.  She will be at UAB until the twins are born.  The doctors say if they can just make it to 26 weeks there is a good chance of survival.  Please pray for 26 weeks...or Thanksgiving (30 weeks).  The longer they stay the better it will be.  Pray for daddy Keaton too.  He works in South Carolina and I know being there while she is here is killing him.  I am asking that you pray for God to wrap His arms around this little precious family and just keep them safe.
 
 

My second major request is for the family of Stan Harris.  His wife, Rebecca found him dead on Thursday when she came home from work.  He has four children and four grandchildren and his presence will be sorely missed.  Please pray for this family as they try and go on without him.
 
My third one is Mrs. Jean Hall.  She is the most precious lady I know.  She has pneumonia and is feeling terrible.  She doesn't feel like eating, drinking, going....she just has no strength or energy.  Will you please pray that her health begins to return.
 
Pray for both of our churches, pray for our country and government.  Pray for those in harms way.  Pray God's will be done.  Thanks for helping me out.  I appreciate the added strength.  God Bless You All. 
 
 
 

Quotes Thomas Jefferson did not say...


Portrait of President Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826) by Revolutionary War hero Tadeusz Kosciuszko (1746-1817)

Quotation: "The beauty of the Second Amendment is that it will not be needed until they try to take it."

Earliest known appearance in print attributed to Thomas Jefferson:: 2007


Comments: We currently have no evidence that Thomas Jefferson said or wrote, "The beauty of the Second Amendment is that it will not be needed until they try to take it" or any of its listed variations.

For a discussion of this spurious quote see the Monticello website here.

Saturday, September 28, 2013

Magazine Subscription From Zinio Winners!

I did a giveaway for a magazine subscription to Zinio here. 9 lucky winners were picked!

The winners are..



Number 1, which is Kim


Number 3, which is sara hamltion


Number 4, which is Crystal


Number 7, which is quickbite


Number 9, which is Edward Chan


Number 12, which is Shawna Kryshel


Number 14, which is Meg Davis


Number 16, which is Madeline B


Number 20, which is Chee Yong Hsia



Congrats!!


If you didn't win, I currently have a giveaway for The Little Mermaid DVD here so you can try again. I will also have future giveaways!



Farewell My Dear Friend

I am sad this morning.  Yesterday I got a phone call from my cousin/singing partner/sister, Amanda tell me that our other singing partner had lost her husband.  I was in shock.  I could not believe that Stan was gone.  Today I want to share one of my favorite stories about Stan and his character.  Ten plus years ago, when I lived in my little apartment, a friend gave me a sad little chiffrobe that she had stored in her barn.  I only had two tiny closets in my apartment and the piece gave me some much needed storage space.  It was warped in the back and the front had some areas of water damage from being stored so long in the barn....but it was still usable.  I kept it until Frank and I married and I moved into his apartment.  Stan had booths at Angels Antiques in Opelika and he also built and restored furniture so I gave the piece to him.  Several months later we met Stan and Rebecca at Angels.  He was so excited and met us at the front door to escort us to his booths.  He wanted to show me his newest piece.  I looked his booth over and everything was gorgeous.  He kept standing beside a piece and clearing his throat.  I finally looked in his direction and there was a gorgeous...I mean drop dead gorgeous cedar hall tree.  Stan had a huge smile on his face.  The cedar hall tree was the tired and sad little chiffrobe.  Stan had taken it and converted it into a piece of furniture worthy of being in a million dollar mansion.  It was amazing but then....that was how Stan was....with furniture and with people.  Stan was one of those amazing people who could see something battered, worn, and abused on the outside and find the beauty within.  I know he did with me.  Stan could always see the heart of the wood.  When I first met Stan and Rebecca I was battered, abused, and worn and had no self-worth.  Stan loved me just as I was and always made me feel like I was special.  He was special to me.  I loved getting a big old bear hug from him everytime we were together.  He was my friend and I will miss him very much.  Please pray for my friend, his wife, Rebecca.  I know his death has left a huge hole in her heart and life.  He will be sorely missed.  Frank told her yesterday that he envied Stan.  Rebecca looked at Frank and asked, "Why?"  Frank then told her because Stan was where he (Frank) was striving to be.  Heaven was rejoicing with the entrance of this new angel.  As we left the house yesterday after spending time with the kids (Charity, Zeb, and Virginia), Ashton (his granddaughter) and Rebecca I hugged her and told her if she needed anything to call me.  She told me she would be alright because she was a Still Magnolia (the name of our singing group and our power statement).  I knew with her parting statement that she would be alright....because she was right....we are Still Magnolias

The role of slaves in the 18th & 19th century American economy


African peoples were captured & transported to the Western Hemisphere to work.  Most European colonial economies in the Americas from the 16th - 19th century were dependent on enslaved African labor for their survival.  The rationale of European colonial officials was that the abundant land they had "discovered" in the Americas was useless without sufficient labor to exploit it.  Only some 450,000 of the nearly 10 million Africans who survived the Middle Passage across the Atlantic to the Americas during the transatlantic slave trade settled in the continental United States. Nevertheless, these 450,000 had grown to more than 4 million people of African descent by 1860, the dawn of the Civil War.

South Carolina

Slavery was not limited to the Western Hemisphere.  The trans-Saharan slave trade had long supplied enslaved African labor to work on sugar plantations in the Mediterranean alongside white slaves from Russia & the Balkans. This same trade also sent as many as 10,000 slaves a year to serve owners in North Africa, the Middle East, & the Iberian Peninsula.

Cartouche Shipping Hogsheads of Tobacco from Frye-Jefferson map of Virginia, 1755

Of the millions of immigrants who survived the crossing of the Atlantic & settled in the Western Hemisphere between 1492 -1776, only about 1 million were Europeans. The remaining were African. An average of 80 % of these enslaved Africans—men, women, & children—were employed, mostly as field-workers. Women as well as children worked in some capacity.


More than half of the enslaved African captives in the Americas were employed on sugar plantations. Sugar developed into the leading slave-produced commodity in the Americas.  During the 16th & 17th centuries, Brazil dominated the production of sugarcane. One of the earliest large-scale manufacturing industries was established to convert the juice from the sugarcane into sugar, molasses, & eventually rum, the alcoholic beverage of choice of the triangular trade.  The profits made from the sale of these goods in Europe, as well as the trade in these commodities in Africa, were used to purchase more slaves.

Tobacco Advertisement Card, Newman’s Best Virginia, 1700s

By 1750, both free & enslaved black people in the British American colonies, despite the hardships of their lives, manifested a deepening attachment to America. The majority of blacks by now had been born in America, rather than in Africa. While a collective cultural memory of Africa was maintained, personal & direct memories had waned. Slave parents began to give their children biblical rather than African names. 

Tobacco Label, Ford’s Virginia

During the British American colonial period in the United States, tobacco was the dominant slave-produced commodity.  During the colonial era, 61% of all American slaves -- nearly 145,000 -- lived in Virginia & Maryland, working the tobacco fields in small to medium-sized gangs. Planters who owned hundreds of slaves often divided them among several plantations. In the North & the Upper South, masters & bondpeople lived close to each other.  Rice & indigo plantations in South Carolina also employed enslaved African labor.  The South Carolina & Georgia coastal rice belt had a slave population of 40,000. Because rice requires precise irrigation & a large, coordinated labor force, enslaved people lived & worked in larger groups. Plantation owners lived in towns like Charleston or Savannah & employed white overseers to manage their far-flung estates. Overseers assigned a task in the morning, & slaves tended to their own needs, when the assigned work was completed. The region was atypical, because of its more flexible work schedules and more isolated and independent slave culture.

Indigo Production South Carolina. William DeBrahm, A Map of South Carolina and a Part of Georgia  London, published by Thomas Jeffreys, 1757.

Exhausted land caused a decline in tobacco production, & the American Revolution cost Virginia & Maryland their principal European tobacco markets, & for a brief period of time after the Revolution. The future of slavery in the United States was in jeopardy. Most of the northern states abolished it, & even Virginia debated abolition in the Virginia Assembly.

Slave Auction. New York Illustrated News; January 26, 1861

The invention of the cotton gin in 1793, gave slavery a new life in the United States. Between 1800 -  1860, slave-produced cotton expanded from South Carolina & Georgia to newly colonized lands west of the Mississippi. This shift of the slave economy from the upper South (Virginia & Maryland) to the lower South was accompanied by a comparable shift of the enslaved African population to the lower South & West.

Hauling Cotton US South. Harper's New Monthly Magazine (1853-54)

After the abolition of the slave trade in 1808, the principal source of the expansion of slavery into the lower South was the domestic slave trade from the upper South.  By 1850, 1.8 million of the 2.5 million enslaved Africans employed in agriculture in the United States were working on cotton plantations.

Picking Cotton. Ballou's Pictorial (Boston, Jan. 23, 1858)

The vast majority of enslaved Africans employed in plantation agriculture were field hands. Some coastal owners used slaves as fishermen.  Even on plantations, however, they worked in many other capacities. Some were domestics & worked as butlers, waiters, maids, seamstresses, & launderers. Others were assigned as carriage drivers, hostlers, & stable boys. Artisans—carpenters, stonemasons, blacksmiths, millers, coopers, spinners, & weavers—were also employed as part of plantation labor forces.

Slave Auction. The Illustrated London News; February 16, 1861

Enslaved Africans also worked in urban areas. Upward of 10% of the enslaved African population in the United States lived in cities. Charleston, Richmond, Savannah, Mobile, New York, Philadelphia, & New Orleans all had sizable slave populations. In the southern cities, they totaled approximately a third of the population.

Edwin Forbes (1839-1895) Stacking Wheat in Culpepper, Virginia 1863

The range of slave occupations in cities was vast. Domestic servants dominated, but there were carpenters, fishermen, coopers, draymen, sailors, masons, bricklayers, blacksmiths, bakers, tailors, peddlers, painters, & porters. Although most worked directly for their owners, others were hired out to work as skilled laborers on plantations, on public works projects, & in industrial enterprises. A small percentage hired themselves out & paid their owners a percentage of their earnings.

Picking Cotton US South Harper's New Monthly Magazine (1853-54)

Each plantation economy was part of a larger national & international political economy. The cotton plantation economy, for instance, is generally seen as part of the regional economy of the American South. By the 1830s, "cotton was king" indeed in the South. It was also king in the United States, which was competing for economic leadership in the global political economy. Plantation-grown cotton was the foundation of the antebellum southern economy.

 Ginning Cotton US South Harper's New Monthly Magazine (1853-54)

The American financial & shipping industries were also dependent on slave-produced cotton, as was the British textile industry. Cotton was not shipped directly to Europe from the South. Rather, it was shipped to New York & then transshipped to England & other centers of cotton manufacturing in the United States & Europe.  As the cotton plantation economy expanded throughout the southern region, banks & financial houses in New York supplied the loan capital &/or investment capital to purchase land & slaves.

Harvesting Sugar Cane, Louisiana Harper's New Monthly Magazine (1853)

As an inexpensive source of labor, enslaved Africans in the United States also became important economic & political capital in the American political economy. Enslaved Africans were legally a form of property—a commodity. Individually & collectively, they were frequently used as collateral in all kinds of business transactions. They were also traded for other kinds of goods & services.

Slave Market. Harper's Weekly, January 24, 1863

The value of the investments slaveholders held in their slaves was often used to secure loans to purchase additional land or slaves. Slaves were also used to pay off outstanding debts. When calculating the value of estates, the estimated value of each slave was included. This became the source of tax revenue for local & state governments. Taxes were also levied on slave transactions.

Planting Rice US South. Harper's Monthly Magazine (1859)

Politically, the U.S. Constitution incorporated a feature that made enslaved Africans political capital—to the benefit of southern states. The so-called three-fifths compromise allowed the southern states to count their slaves as three-fifths of a person for purposes of calculating states' representation in the U.S. Congress. Thus the balance of power between slaveholding & non-slaveholding states turned, in part, on the three-fifths presence of enslaved Africans in the census.  Slaveholders were taxed on the same three-fifths principle, & no taxes paid on slaves supported the national treasury. In sum, the slavery system in the United States was a national system that touched the very core of its economic & political life.

See: 

Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture.  

Jubilee: The Emergence of African-American Culture, ed. Howard Dodson. Washington, D.C.: The National Geographic Society.  2003.

www.slaveryimages.org, compiled by Jerome Handler and Michael Tuite, and sponsored by the Virginia Foundation for the Humanities and the University of Virginia Library. 


Friday, September 27, 2013

Five Minute Friday: True

On Fridays a bunch of brave writers gather here to all spend 5 collective minutes writing on a single prompt.  

 The short version is: 1. Write for 5 minutes flat for pure unedited love of the written word. (On your blog or in the comments). 2. Link back to Lisa-Jo's blog by clicking here and invite others to join in {you can grab the button code in her blog footer}. 3. Go leave some comment props for the five minute artist who linked up before you. It’s a great way to catch your breath at the end of a long week. - This weeks word is TRUE.

Go: 
When I hear the word true I think of something that is actual and in accordance to fact.  I come from a long line (and I mean L-O-N-G) of storytellers.  We tend to take what is true sometimes and change it up a bit.  Does that mean it is untrue?  Well...not really.  The true story is still there...it is just embedded within descriptive adjectives and adverbs.  I loved listening to the "true" stories my uncles told when I was a child.  It was better than a book.  I would give anything to hear them today.  But, true is so much more than that.  I was raised that telling what was true meant you did not have to worry about which lie you told to whom.  My mom and dad were true to each other the entire 58 years they were married.  My dad still loved my mom just like he did on their wedding day and vice versa.  I grew up wanting that same kind of true relationship with someone.  I learned 20+ years into the marriage that being "true" or un"true" does not necessarily mean one of you is having an affair with another "real" person.  Affairs can be had with inanimate things too.  My ex-husband was not true to me and he had an affair with the Queen of Hearts. His gambling almost cost me everything...but did give Amanda and I a ton of material to write songs with.  It ended up costing me my marriage.  One day I woke up and realized that I had to be true to myself.  Sitting at my desk at work about 12 years ago I was looking for a quote for my class and found a wonderful one.  I printed it off and it sits on my desk even today.   "Above all, be true to yourself, and if you cannot put your heart in it, take yourself out of it."  Thank you Hardy D. Jackson because you saved my life.  I had raised my children to be true to themselves and somewhere along the road of motherhood I had lost sight of this concept.  As a Shakespeare major in college you would think his famous quote, "to thine ownself be true" would have sunk in.....but alas....it didn't.  In my spiritual life I have read the word true in the Bible.  My favorite "true" verses are:  John 15:1 -   “I am the true vine, and my Father is the vineyard keeper, and Proverbs 12:22 -  "The Lord detests false lips; he favors those who do what is true."  Being true is important....to you, to the people you come into contact with, but mostly in your relationship with God.  So, with that in mind...stay true to yourself and have a great weekend.

STOP:

Disney On Ice: Rockin' Ever After

Behold! A goat doing a Miley Cyrus impression.





Obviously I'm kidding. It was just eating goat food.


Last week we went to the Oklahoma State Fair to take Natalie to Disney On Ice: Rockin' Ever After. Tommy stayed home. Princesses are really not his thing. We got to the fair early so we could look around.


We found a petting zoo and Natalie adored all the animals. I did not like the way this goat was looking at me:



I kept my eye on him.


Then Natalie spotted pony rides and had to go on one. The guy who works there looks thrilled:



"How much longer do I have to stand here in this hat?"


Natalie loved her pony. She's confident on horses/ponies/cats...





It was time for my favorite part after her ride: fair food!


I got the cheesy bacon bombs:




They were an explosion of YUM in my mouth. They were deep fried cheese curds surrounded by bacon. Cue my Homer Simpson impression: "Mmmmm.....bacon..."


It was time for Disney On Ice after we ate. Now, if you go to Disney On Ice I recommend bringing a light up toy already--because the ones they sell are $20. Natalie brought the one that I bought last year even though she wanted others. "But MERIDA has a light up stick!" she told me. "Then go ask MERIDA to buy it for you," I responded.

We had seats in the very front thanks to my Mom who treated us to the show:



Now, warning, my Disney On Ice pictures suck. I do not know how to take good pictures in the dark. I tried different settings and they didn't come out. So excuse the blurriness. I do not know what I'm doing when I take pictures. I have a Nikon D40 that lives on Auto.


Mickey and Minnie came out first.


Natalie told me seriously, "They look the same as they did when we saw them at Disney in June!"


Goofy and Donald came out:



Sebastion came out and did a number:



Ariel signed her voice away:



Ariel got legs and did this. I sort of want to send this picture to my husband and go, "Sorry I'm not this flexible."



Eric came out and tossed her around:


You'd better HOPE that the Eric actor is not having a bad day...


Rapunzel came out next. Natalie booed at Mother Gothel:


"She's just so RUDE!" Natalie said.


Rapunzel knocked out Flynn. I sort of want to do this to One Direction when I hear them sing:




Maximus came out. I wonder how the person being the butt feels?




Merida came out next. I did not get many good pictures of her.



Then Gaston came out. He and Kanye West would be great friends.



Everyone rejoiced. Not because of Gaston. This was the Be Our Guest number. I wish my cutlery would dance for me.




Gaston killed the Beast:




The Beast turned into a PERSON!



"Behold! It is I!"


Everyone came out for the last number:



Natalie wanted Belle's gold dress. I wanted Tom to dress up like the Prince. He said no way. Never. Not even if Natalie asked.



It was a fantastic show. If they come next year, we'll probably go again! Tickets are as cheap as $15 so if Disney On Ice comes to your area, I highly recommend it!