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1864 Moore Geographical Atlas for Confederate Children, published in Raleigh, N.C.
DixieGeography-moore-1864This was once the most prosperous country in the world … In the year 1860 the Ablitionists became strong enough to elect one of their men for President. Abraham Lincoln was a weak man, and the South believed he would allow laws to be made, which would deprive them of their rights. So the Southern States seceded, and elected Jefferson Davis for their President. This so enraged President Lincoln that he declared war, and has exhausted nearly all the strength of this nation, in a vain attempt to whip the south back into the Union. Thousands of lives have been lost, and the Earth has been drenched with blood; but still Abraham is unable to conquer the 'Rebels' as he calls the South. The South only asked to be let alone, and to divide the public property equally. It would have been wise in the North to have aid to her Southern Sisters, 'If you are not content to dwell with us longer, depart in peace.And the last sentence,
Q. What is the present drawback to our trade? A. An unlawful Blockade by the miserable and Hellish Yankee Nation.
Q. Which race is the most civilized?A. The Caucasian.Q. Is the African savage in this country?A. No; they are docile and religious here.Q. How are they in Africa where they first come from?A. They are very ignorant, cruel and wretched.
Marinda Branson Moore (December 16, 1829 - June 27, 1864) was a North Carolina educator and writer of textbooks. Moore was born in Randolph County, North Carolina. She was the first wife of businessman Enoch William Moore (1868 - 1952), who ran a mill complex, Moore's Mill, in Belews Creek, NC. In 1855, she founded the Margarita Seminary, named after Margarita Nixon, a missionary to China. While always a religious and political conservative, as tensions over slavery and states' rights peaked in the leadup to the American Civil War (1861 - 1865), Moore's attitudes became increasingly polarized. She was not alone in her belief that textbooks and other educational materials, most of which were published in New England, were antithetical to the political, moral, and social values of southern states. She began writing and printing her own textbooks, which she called 'Dixie Readers', which were published during the Civil War by Branson and Farrar in Raleigh, North Carolina. The most prominent of these was her Primary Geography, which although deplorably racist by modern standards, is unique reflects the ethos of Southern values at the height of the war. The work was popular enough to have gone through two editions. She died in 1864, before the end of the Civil War. More by this mapmaker...
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This copy is copyright protected.
Copyright © 2024 Geographicus Rare Antique Maps