Rebecca Brewton Motte and the American Revolution in South Carolina (American Heritage)

★★★★★ 4.3 57 reviews

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Management number 231852721 Release Date 2026/06/18 List Price US$3.44 Model Number 231852721
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A vivid portrait of power, privilege, and peril in colonial Charleston.Eighteenth-century Charleston was a city built on water, wealth, and whispers—where the harbor brimmed with merchant ships and war vessels and status was measured in wharves, wine cellars, imported porcelain, and family names that could open every door. This is colonial Charleston at its peak: a thriving Atlantic port fueled by rice and indigo, shaped by transatlantic trade, and held together by tightly woven kinship networks that blurred the line between commerce and political power.At the center is Rebecca Brewton Motte—born into privilege, married into influence, and forced by fire, disease, and revolution to become far more than a genteel figure in a drawing room. Through the interconnected worlds of the Brewtons, Mottes, Pinckneys, and their allies, the story reveals how South Carolina's elite built fortunes, constructed iconic townhouses, navigated epidemics and natural disasters, and managed sprawling plantations with enslaved labor powering every "luxury" detail.But this is not a postcard version of the past. Alongside elegant architecture and consumer culture sits the raw reality of colonial life: malaria, yellow fever, smallpox, hurricanes, legal constraints on women, and the destabilizing pressure of war and British occupation. Moving from Charleston's grand streets to backcountry plantations, this biography-driven history shows how one woman's life illuminates the larger machinery of colonial South Carolina, the American Revolution, and the fragile world that made—and nearly unmade—an Atlantic empire. Historian and author Alexia Helsley details this remarkable history.  Read more

ASIN B0GZD8WXDN
ISBN13 978-1467173261
Language English
Publisher The History Press
Print length 128 pages
Accessibility Learn more
Publication date July 28, 2026

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