BIBLIOGRAPHY OF SOUTH CAROLINA FOLKLIFE


Compiled by: Gary Stanton and Dorothy Akerman
South Carolina Folk Arts Resource Center


1988

[Rev 3.1 5-89]

Acorns: Stories from Darlington County's Past. Darlington County Bicentennial Committee. n.pub., n.date.
Adams, Edward, C. L. "Carolina Folklore; Spirituals in the Making." Charleston Museum Quarterly. vol. 1, no. 2 (1925) 18-24.
_____. "A South Carolina Folksong." Southern Workman. vol. 54 (1925) 568.
_____. Congaree Sketches. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press, 1927.
_____. Nigger to Nigger. New York: Scribner's, 1928.
Adams, George C. S. "Rattlesnake Eye." Southern Folklore Quarterly. vol. 2 (1938) 37-38.
Adams, Samuel Hopkins. "Dr. Bug, Dr. Buzzard and the U.S.A." True. vol 33 (July, 1949) 69-71.
Adovasio, J. M. Basketry Technology: A Guide to Identification and Analysis. Chicago: Aldine Publishing Co., 1977.
Ahrens, Pat J. A History of the Musical Careers of Dewitt "Snuffy" Jenkins, Banjoist and Homer "Pappy" Sherrill, Fiddler. (Pamphlet) West Columbia, S.C.: Wentworth Corp., 1970.
_____. "The Snuffy Jenkins Story." Bluegrass Unlimited. vol. 2, no. 5 (1967) 1-2.
_____. "The Role of the Crazy Water Crystals Company in Promoting Hillbilly Music." John Edwards Memorial Foundation Quarterly. vol. 6, no. 3 (1970) 107-109.
Aimes, Hubert H.S. "African Institutions in America." The Journal of American Folklore. vol. 18 (1905) 15-32.
Albanese, Anthony Gerald. "The Plantation as a School: The Sea Islands of Georgia and South Carolina, A Test Case, 1800-1860." D. Ed. dissertation, Rutgers University, 1970.
Albright, Alan B. and Steffy, J. Richard. "The Brown's Ferry Vessel-Preliminary Report." The International Journal of Nautical Archaeology and Underwater Exploration. (1979) 121-142.
Alford, Robbie L. Ghosts Ghosts Ghosts Ghosts. Georgetown, S.C. 1971.
All That Remains: The Traditional Architecture and Historic Engineering Structures of the Richard B. Russell Multiple Resource Area, Georgia and South Carolina. Linda H. Worthy, editor. Atlanta, G.A.: Russell Papers, Archeological Services, United States Department of the Interior, 1983.
Allan, Glenn. Little Sorrowful. New York: Samuel Curl, 1946.
Allen, William Francis; Ware, Charles Pickard; and Garrison, Lucy McKim. Slave Songs of the United States. (1867) New York: Peter Smith, 1951.
Allen, William F. "The Negro Dialect." Nation. vol. 1 (1865) 744-745.
Alleyne, Mervyne. "Acculturation and the Cultural Matrix of Creolization." Pidginization and Creolization of Languages. Edited by Dell Hymes, New York: Cambridge University Press, 1971, 169-186.
Anderson, David G. "The Archaeology of Tenancy in the Southeast: A View From the South Carolina Low Country." South Carolina Antiquities. vol. 14 (1982) 71-86.
Anonymous, "Note on Gullah." South Carolina Historical and Genealogical Magazine. vol. 50 (1949) 56-57.
Ardrey, W. B. "The Catawba Indians." American Antiquarian. vol. 16 (1894) 266-269.
Arrowood, Mary D. and Hamilton, T. F. "Nine Negro Spirituals, 1850-1861, from Lower South Carolina." Journal of American Folklore. vol. 41 (1928) 579-584.
Baker, Steven G. "Colono-Indian Pottery from Cambridge, South Carolina, with comments on the Historic Catawba Pottery Trade." Notebook. vol. 4, no. 1, Columbia: Institute of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of South Carolina, 1972.
Baldwin, William P. The Visible Village: A McClellanville Scrapbook. n.p., 1984.
Ballanta-Taylor, Nicholas George Julius. Saint Helena Island Spirituals. New York: G. Schirmer, 1925.
Barber, Edwin Atlee. Pottery and Porcelain of the United States: An Historical Review of American Ceramic Art. (1893, 1971) New York: Feingold and Lewis, 1976.
Bascom, William R. "Gullah Folk Beliefs Concerning Childbirth." Paper given at American Folklore Society, Andover, Mass., Dec. 1941.
_____. "Gullah Superstitions Persist." El Palacio. vol. 49 no. 2 (February, 1942) 48.
_____. "Acculturation Among the Gullah Negroes." American Anthropology. vol. 43 (1941) 43-50.
_____. Ifa Divination. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1969.
_____. "African Folktales in America: 11. Taught an Incriminating Song (Saying)." Research in African Literatures. vol. 12, no. 2 (1981) 203-213.
"The Basket Weavers of Charleston." Southern Living. October, 1970, 22-26.
Bass, Robert Duncan. "Negro Songs from the Pedee Country." The Journal of American Folklore. vol. 44, no. 174 (1931) 418-436.
Bastide, Roger. African Civilisations in the New World. New York: Harper Row, 1972 (originaly published Les Ameriques Noires. Paris: Payot, 1967).
Bastin, Bruce. Crying for the Carolines. London: Studio Vista, 1971.
Bastin, Bruce. Red River Blues. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1986.
Batchelder, Ruth. "Beaufort, of the Real South." Travel. vol. 28 (February, 1917) 28-31.
Beardsley, John. "Discovering Black American Folk Art." Portfolio. (May/June, 1983) 86-91.
Beaufort County, South Carolina. Its Shrines and Early History. Augusta, Ga.: N.L. Willett, n.d.
Benjamin, S.G. "The Sea Islands." Harper's. (November, 1878) 839-861.
Bennett, John. The Doctor to the Dead: Grotesque Ledgends and Folk Tales of Old Charleston. (New York: Rinehart, 1946) Wesport, Conn.: Negro Universities Press, 1973.
_____. "Folktales of Old Charleston." Yale Review. vol. 32 (1943) 721-740.
_____. "Charleston Folk-Tales." Negro Digest. vol. 1 (September, 1943) 33-36.
_____. "Charleston Folk-Tales." Negro Digest. vol. 1 (September, 1943) 33-36.
_____. "Revival Sermon at Little St. John's." Atlantic Monthly. vol. 98 (August, 1906) 256-268.
_____. "Gullah: A Negro Patois." in South Atlantic Quarterly. vol. 7 (1908) 332-347, and vol. 8 (1909) 39-52.
_____. Madame Margot: a Grotesque Legend of Old Charleston. New York: The Century Co., 1921.
_____. "Charleston Folk-Tales." South Carolina History Magazine. vol. 50 (1949) 56-57.
_____. "South Carolina Folk Tales." Charleston News and Courier. (August-September, 1951).
Bethel, Elizabeth Rauh. Promiseland, A Century of Life in a Negro Community. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1981.
Bierer, Bert W. ed. South Carolina Indian Lore. 1972.
Billington, Ray Allen. "A Social Experiment: The Port Royal Journal of Charlotte L. Forten, 1862-1863." Journal of Negro History. vol. 35 (1950) 223-264.
Bivins, John, Jr. "Fraktur in the South: An Itinerant Artist." Journal of Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts. vol. 1, no. 2 (1975) 1-23.
Blanton, Joshua E. "I Sho Ben Lub Dat Buckra." Southern Workman. vol. 37 (1908) 242-246.
Blockson, Charles L. "Sea Changes in the Sea Island: 'Nowhere to Lay Down Weary Head'." National Geographic Magazine. vol. 172, no. 6 (December 1987) 733-765. Blok, T.P. "Annotations to Mr. Turner's Africanisms in the Gullah Dialect." Lingua. Amsterdam, vol. 8 (1959) 306-321.
Blumer, Thomas J. "History as a Tool in a Folklife Study of the Catawba Indians of South Carolina." New York Folklore. vol. 9 (1983) 67-74.
_____. "Catawba Influences on the Modern Cherokee Pottery Tradition." Appalachian Journal: A Regional Studies Review. Boone, North Carolina, vol. 14:2 (Winter, 1987) 153-173.
_____. Bibliography of the Catawbas. Native American Bibliography Series, 10. Metuchen, NJ: Scarecrow Press (1987).
Bolick, Julian Stevenson. Georgetown Ghosts . Clinton, SC.: Jacobs Brothers Press, 1956.
_____. Ghosts from the Coast . Clinton, SC.: Jacobs Brothers Press, 1966.
_____. The Return of the Gray Man. Clinton, S.C.: Jacobs Brothers Press, 1956.
_____. Waccamaw Plantations. Clinton, S.C.: Jacobs Press, 1946.
Bolton, H. Carrington. "Decoration of Graves of Negroes in South Carolina." Journal of American Folklore. vol. 4 (1891) 214.
Bond, Alec. "More Light on Land's End Road." Tennesse Folklore Society Bulletin. vol. 49 (1983) 129-133.
Borowsky, Anton. "Two Low Country Tales." North Carolina Folklore. vol. 9, no. 1 (1961) 46-48.
Botkin, Benjamin A. Lay My Burden Down: A Folk History of Slavery. Chicago: University of Chicago Press (1945) 1969.
Botume, Elizabeth Hyde. First Days Amongst the Contrabands. Boston: Lee and Shephard, 1893.
Brackner, Joey. "Wood: The Democratic Tradition." in Carolina Folk: The Cradle of a Southern Tradition." Edited by George D. Terry and Lynn Robertson Myers, McKissick Museum, University of South Carolina, 1985, 33-44.
Bradley, Francis W. "South Carolina Proverbs." Southern Folklore Quarterly. 1 (1937) 57-101.
_____. "A Word-list from South Carolina." American Dialect Society. No. 14 (November 1950) 3-73.
_____. "The Press as an Ally in Collecting Folk Speech." Publications of the American Dialect Society. vol. 17 (1952) 29-39.
_____. "Supplementary List of South Carolina Words and Phrases." Publications of the American Dialect Society. vol. 21 (1954) 16-41.
_____."South Carolina Folklore." The State. Columbia (August 31, 1954).
_____. "Little Mary Fagan." Southern Folklore Quarterly. vol. 24, no. 2 (1960) 144-146.
_____. "Sandlappers and Clay Eaters." North Carolina Folklore. vol. 12 (1964) 27-28.
Bragg, John. "A Cantometric Analysis of Folk Music in a Sea Island Community." in North Carolina Folklore. vol. 26, no. 3 (1978) 157-163.
Brewer, J. Mason, ed. Humorous Folktales of the South Carolina Negro. Publications of the South Carolina Negro Folklore Guild: No. 1, Orangeburg, Claflin College, 1945.
Brewer, J. Mason. "John Tales." Publications of the Texas Folklore Society. vol. 21 (1946) 81-104.
_____. "South Carolina Negro Folklore Guild." Journal of American Folklore. vol. 59 (1946) 493-494.
Brice-Heath, Shirley. Ways with Words: Ethnography of Communication in Communities and Classroom. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1983.
Brice-Heath, Shirley and Ferguson, Charles, eds. Language in the U.S.A. Cambridge University Press, 1981.
Bridges, Daisy W. Ed. Potters of the Catawba Valley, North Carolina. Charlotte: The Mint Museum, 1980.
Brown, C. C. Uncle Dan'l and his Friends. Greenville, S.C.: Keys and Thomas, n.d.
Brown, Charles. "Charleston, South Carolina Communications Center." Southern Exposure. vol. 5 (1977) 196-198.
Brown, Douglas Summers. The Catawba Indians. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 1966.
Bruce, Philip A. The Plantation Negro as a Freeman. New York: Putnam, 1889.
Bryant, Lawrence Chesterfield, and Deloach, J. H. "The Status of Music in Negro High Schools in South Carolina." Journal of Research in Music Education. vol. 12 (1964) 177-179.
Bryant, Margaret M. "Folklore from Edgefield County, South Carolina: Folktales and Riddles." Southern Folklore Quarterly. vol.12 (1948) 197-209.
_____. "Folklore from Edgefield County, South Carolina: Folkways and Beliefs." Southern Folklore Quarterly. vol. 12 (1948) 279-291.
_____. "Folklore from Edgefield County, South Carolina." Southern Folklore Quarterly. vol. 13, no. 2 (1949) 136-148.
Burlin, Natalie Curtis. "Again the Negro." Poetry. vol. 11 (1917) 147-151.
Burnett, Edmund C. "Hog Raising and Hog Driving in the Region of the French Broad River." Agricultural History 20 (1946) 86-103.
Burrison, John A. "Afro-American Folk Pottery in the South." Southern Folklore Quarterly. 42 (1978) 175-199.
_____. "Alkaline Glazed Stoneware: A Deep South Pottery Tradition." Southern Folklore Quarterly. vol. 39 (December, 1975) 377-403.
_____. "Carolina Clay: The Rise of a Regional Pottery Tradition." Carolina Folk: The Cradle of a Southern Tradition. Edited by George D. Terry and Lynn Robertson Myers, Columbia: McKissick Museum, University of South Carolina, 1985, 11-22.
Burt, Mrs. W. C. "The Baptist Ox." Journal of American Folklore. vol. 34 (1921) 397-398.
Burton, Orville Vernon. In My Father's House Are Many Mansions: Family and Community in Edgefield, South Carolina. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press, 1985.
Butler, Alfloyd. "The Black's Contribution of Elements of African Religion to Christianity in America: A Case Study of the Great Awakening in South Carolina." Ph. D. dissertation, Northwestern University, 1975.
"Canning Negro Melodies." Literary Digest. vol. 52 (1916) 1556, 1558-1559.
Carawan, Guy."Christmas Watch on Johns Island-South Carolina Sea Islands." Krome Kazoo. vol. 2 no. 11 (1968) 4-5.
_____. "Spiritual Singing in the South Carolina Sea Islands." Caravan. No. 20(1960) 20-25.
_____. "The Living Folk Heritage of the Sea Islands." Sing Out! vol. 14 (1964) 28-32.
Carawan, Guy, and Carawan, Candie. Ain't You Got a Right to the Tree of Life? The People of Johns Island, South Carolina. Photography by Robert Yellin, New York: Simon and Schuster, 1966.
_____. John's Island." Sing Out. vol 16, no. 1 (1966) 25-30.
_____. Freedom is a Constant Struggle: Songs of the Freedom Movement. New York: Oak, 1968.
Carawan, Guy, and Carawan, Candie, compilers. We Shall Overcome. New York: Oak, 1963.
Carrillo, Richard F. The Howser House and the Chronicle Grave and Mass Burial: King's Mountain National Park, South Carolina. Research Manuscript Series, 102. Publications of the South Carolina Institute of Archaeology and Anthropology, Columbia: University of South Carolina, 1976.
_____. Archaeological Excavation at Pickneyville, site of Pickney District, 1791-1800. Research Manuscript Series, 25. Publications of the South Carolina Institute of Archaeology and Anthropology, Columbia: University of South Carolina, 1972.
Cerruti, James. "Sea Islands: Adventuring Along the South's Surprising Coast." National Geographic Magazine. (March, 1971) 366-390.
Chamberlain, A. F. The Catawba Language. Toronto: Imrie and Graham, 1888.
Chandler, Genevieve. "1930's Federal Writers Project: Collecting Gullah Folklore." Southern Exposure. vol. 5 no. 2-3 (1977) 119-121.
"Charleston (and Gershwin) Provide Folk Opera." Literary Digest. vol. 120 (October 26, 1935) 18.
Chase, Judith Wragg. Afro-American Art and Craft. New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold Co., 1971.
Chatelain, Heli. "Some Causes of the Retardation of African Progress." Journal of American Folklore. vol. 8 (1895) 177-184.
Christensen, Abigal M. H. Afro-American Folk Lore. (J.G. Cupples Co.: Boston, 1892) New York: Negro University Press, 1969.
_____. "Spirituals and 'Shouts' of Southern Negroes." Journal of American Folklore. vol. 7 (1894) 154-155.
Cline, R. I. "The Tar-Baby Story." American Literature. vol. 2 (1930) 72-78.
Clinkscales, John George. On the Old Plantation: Reminiscences of his Childhood. Spartanburg, S.C.: Bond and White, 1916.
Cobb, Lucy M. and Hicks, Mary A. "Negro Folktales." Publications of the Texas Folklore Society. vol. 17 (1941) 108-112.
Cohen, Henning. Articles in Periodicals and Serials on South Carolina Literature and Related Subjects, 1900-1955. South Carolina Bibliographies, No. 4. Columbia: South Carolina Archives Department, 1956.
_____. "Going to See the Widow." Journal of American Folklore. vol. 44 (1951) 223.
_____. "A Negro 'Folk Game' in Colonial South Carolina." Southern Folklore Quarterly. vol. 16 (1952) 183-185.
_____. "Slave Names in Colonial South Carolina." American Speech. vol. 27 (1952) 102-107.
_____. "Burial of the Drowned Among the Gullah Negroes." Southern Folklore Quarterly. vol. 22 (1958) 93-97.
Cohen, Lily Young. Lost Spirituals. New York: Walter Neale, 1928.
Cohen, Norm. "Dorsey Dixon: A Place in the Sun for a Real Textile Troubador." Textile Labor. vol. 25, no. 11 (1964) 4-5.
_____. "The Urge to Write Songs: The Case of Dorson Dixon." John Edwards Memorial Foundation Quarterly. vol. 10, no. 34, part 2 (1974) 83-84.
Colcock, Erroll Hay and Patti Lee Hay Colcock. Dusky Land: Gullah Poems and Sketches of Coastal South Carolina. Clinton, S.C.: Jacobs, 1942.
Combs, Diana Williams. Early Gravestone Art in Georgia and South Carolina. Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1986.
Conroy, Pat. The Water is Wide. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1972.
Cooley, Rossa B. "Aunt Jane and Her People, the Real Negroes of the Sea Islands." Outlook. vol. 90 (1908), 424-432.
Coon, David Leroy. "The Development of Market Agriculture in South Carolina, 1670-1785." Ph. D. dissertation, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1972.
Courlander, Harold. Negro Folk Music: USA. New York: Columbia University Press, 1963.
Craven, Avery Odell. "Poor Whites and Negoes in the Ante-Bellum South." Journal of Negro History. vol. 15 (1930) 14-25.
Creel, Mike. "From the Rivers of Antiquity." South Carolina Wildlife. vol. 31, no. 3 (1984) 40-45.
_____. "Uncle Toot's Convertible." South Carolina Wildlife. vol. 28, no. 1 (1981) 43-47.
Crowley, Daniel J. "African Folktales in Afro-America." in Black America. Edited by John F. Szwed, New York: Basic Books, 1970, 179-189.
Crum, Mason. Gullah: Negro Life in the Carolina Sea Islands. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press, 1940.
Cunningham, Irma Aloyce Ewing. "A Syntactic Analysis of Sea Island Creole 'Gullah'." Ph. D. dissertation, University of Michigan, 1970.
Curtis, Elizabeth. Gateways and Doorways of Charleston, South Carolina in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries. Edited by Maxwell Kimball and Arthur C. Holden. New York: Architectural Book Publishing Co., 1926.
Cuthbert, J. H. Life of Richard Fuller. D.D. New York, 1878.
Dabbs, Edith. Face of an Island: Leigh Richmond Miner's Photographs of St. Helena Island. Columbia: The R.L. Bryan Co., 1970.
Daise, Ronald. Reminiscences of Sea Island Heritage. Orangeburg, S.C.: Sandlapper Press, 1986.
Dargan, Amanda. "Family Identity and the Social Use of Folklore: A South Carolina Family Tradition." M.A. Thesis, Memorial University of Newfoundland, 1978.
_____. "She Comes By It Honestly: Characterization in Family Folklore." 222-231, in Zeitlin, Steven J.; Kotkin, Amy J.; and Baker, Holly Cutting. A Celebration of American Family Folklore: Tales and Traditions from the Smithsonian Collection. New York: Pantheon, 1982.
Davis, Gerald L. "Afro-American Coil Basketry in Charleston County, South Carolina." in American Folklife. Edited by Don Yoder, Austin: University of Texas Press, 1976, 151-184.
_____. "An Analysis of Afro-American Sermons." M.A. Thesis, University of California, Berkeley, 1970.
Davis, Henry Campbell. "Negro Folk-Lore in South Carolina." Journal of American Folklore. vol. 27 (1914) 241-254.
Dawson, Warrington. "Le Caractére Spècial de la Musique Négre en Amèrique." Journal de la Sociètè des Amèricanistes. (Paris). n.s., vol. 24 (1932) 273-286.
Day, Gregory. South Carolina Low Country Coil Baskets. Charleston, S.C.: South Carolina Arts Commission, The Communication Center, 1977.
_____. "Folklife and Photography: Bringing the FSA Home." Southern Exposure. vol. 5 (1977) 122-133.
_____. "Afro-Carolinian Art, Towards the History of a Southern Expressive Tradition." Contemporary Art/Southeast. vol. 1, no. 5 (1978) 10-21.
Day, Kay Young. "My Family Is Me: Women's Kin Networks and Social Power in a Black Sea Island Community." Ph.D. dissertation, Rutgers University, 1983.
_____. "Kinship in a Changing Economy." in Holding on to the Land and the Lord: Kinship, Ritual, Land Tenure, and Social Policy in the Rural South. edited by Robert L. Hall and Carol B. Stack. Southern Athropological Proceedings 15. Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1982.
Deas, Alston, and Bryan, Richard J. The Early Ironwork of Charleston. Columbia, S.C.: Bostick and Thornley, 1941.
Deas-Moore, Vennie. "Home Remedies, Herb Doctors, and Granny Midwives." The World and I vol. 2, no. 1 (January 1987) 474-485.
Delano, Jack. "Recollections of the Santee-Cooper Project," and " Recollections of the FSA." Southern Exposure. vol. 5, no. 2-3 (1977) 122-133.
De Lerma, Dominique-Rene. Greenwood Encyclopedia of Black Music, Bibliography of Black Music. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press.
Delmore, Alton. Truth is Stranger Than Publicity. Nashville, Tenn.: Country Music Foundation Press, 1977.
DePriest, Joe. "The Sweet Fiddling of Pappy Sherrill." Bluegrass Unlimited. February, 1986, 22-25.
Derby, Doris Adelaide. "Afro-American Baskets." World Heritage Museum Notes. vol. 3 (1976).
_____. "Black Women Basket Makers: A Study of Domestic Economy in Charleston County, South Carolina." Ph. D. dissertation, University of Illinois, 1980.
De Saussure, Nancy (Bostick). Old Plantation Days: Being Recollections of Southern Life Before the Civil War. New York: Duffield and Co., 1909.
Dett, Robert Nathaniel. Review of St. Helena Island Spiritual. In Southern Workman. vol. 54 (1925) 527.
Devlin, George Alfred. "South Carolina and Black Migrations, 1865-1930." Ph.D. dissertation, University of South Carolina, 1984.
Doar, David. A Sketch of the Agricultural Society of St. James, Santee, South Carolina and an Address on the Traditions and Reminiscences of the Parish Delivered before Society on 4th of July 1907. Charleston: Calder-Fladger Co., 1908.
Doar, David. "Negro Proverbs." Charleston Museum Quarterly. vol. II:1 (1932) 23-24.
[Doar, David] Rice and Rice Planting in the South Carolina Low Country. Charleston: The Charleston Museum, 1936.
Dover, Cedric. American Negro Art. New York: New York Graphic Society, 1960.
Dowdey, Maree. "Ann Smith's 'Pineapple' Quilt." in Social Fabric: South Carolina's Traditional Quilts. Edited by Laurel Horton and Lynn Robertson Myers, Columbia: McKissick Museum, University of South Carolina, 1984, 37-39.
Dubose, Louise Jones, ed. "South Carolina Folk Tales: Stories of Animals and Supernatural Beings." Writers' Program of the Work Projects Administration in the State of South Carolina. University of South Carolina Bulletin. October, 1941.
Duncan, Eula G. Big Road Walker. New York: Fred A. Stokes, 1940.
Duncan, John Donald. "Servitude and Slavery in Colonial South Carolina, 1670-1776." Ph. D. dissertation, Emory University, 1972.
Dunn, Phillip C. and Johnson, Thomas L. Richard S. Roberts, 1920-1936. Columbia: Columbia Museum & University of South Carolina Press, 1986.
Eaddy, Mary Ann. "Slave Housing on the Rice Plantations, Georgetown County, South Carolina." M.A. thesis, George Washington University, Washington, D.C., 1985.
Easterby, J. H. The South Carolina Rice Plantation. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1945.
Easterby, J. H., contributor. "Shipbuilding on St. Helena Island in 1816: the Diary of Ebenzer Coffin." South Carolina Historical and Genealogical Magazine. vol. 47, 117-120.
"Education of the Freedman." North American Review. vol. 10 (October, 1865) 528-549.
Epstein, Dena J. Sinful Tunes and Spirituals: Black Folk Music to the Civil War. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1977.
_____. "Slave Music in the United States before 1860: A Survey of Sources, Parts I and II." Music Library Association Notes. 2nd Series, vol. xx, no. 1-2 (Winter 1962-63) 195-212; vol. xx, no 3. (Summer, 1963) 377-390.
Fauset, Arthur Huff. "Negro Folk Tales from the South." Journal of American Folklore. vol. 40 (1927) 213-303.
Ferrell, Stephen T. and Ferrell, T. M., eds. Early Decorated Stoneware of the Edgefield District, South Carolina. Greenville, S.C.: Greenville County Museum of Art, 1976.
_____. "Edgefield Stoneware." Country Living. vol. 8, no. 2 (1985) 38-40.
Fewkes, Vladimir J. "Catawba Pottery-Making, with Notes on Pamunkey Pottery-Making, Cherokee Pottery-Making, and Coiling." Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society. vol. 88, no. 2 (1944) 69-124.
Fickling, Susan M. "Slave Conversion in South Carolina 1830-1860." Bulletin of the University of South Carolina. no. 146 (1924) 1-59.
Fireside Tales: Stories of the Old Dutch Fork. Edited by James Everett Kibler, Jr. Columbia: Dutch Fork Press, 1984.
Fishburne, Ann Sinkler. Belvidere: A Plantation Memory. Columbia, S.C.: University of South Carolina Press, 1949.
Fisher, Miles Mark. American Negro Slave Songs. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1953.
Fitchett, E. Horace. "Superstitions in South Carolina." Crisis. vol. 43 (1936) 360-361, 370.
_____. "The Traditions of the Free Negro in Charleston, South Carolina." Journal of Negro History. vol. 25 (1940) 139-152.
Fleckenstein, Henry A. Southern Decoys of Virginia and the Carolinas. Exton, Pa.: Schiffer, 1983.
Fleetwood, Rusty. Tidecraft: an Introductory Look at the Boats of Lower South Carolina, Georgia, and North Eastern Florida, 1650-1950. Savannah, G.A.: Coastal Heritage Society, 1982.
Folk, Edwin H. "The Code Duello in South Carolina." M.A. Thesis, University of South Carolina, 1924.
"Folk-Lore and Ethnology." Southern Workman. vol. 23 (1894) 46-47.
"Folklore from St. Helena, South Carolina." Journal of American Folklore. vol. 38 (1925) 217-238.
Folklore Scrap-Book, "Mortuary Customs and Beliefs of South Carolina Negroes." The Journal of American Folklore. vol. 7 (1894) 318-319.
Foote, Henry Wilder. The Penn School on St. Helena Island. Reprint from Southern Workman. Hampton, Virginia: Hampton Institute Press, 1904.
Forten, Charlotte. "Life on the Sea Islands." Atlantic Monthly. 1864.
"Freedman at Port Royal." North American Review. vol. 10 (July, 1865) 1-28.
Fry, Gladys-Marie. Night Riders in Black Folk History. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1975.
Gatschet, A. S. "Grammatic Sketch of the Catawba Language." American Anthropology. vol. 2 (1900) 527-549.
Gellert, Lawrence, collector. Negro Songs of Protest. vol. 1. Arranged by Elie Siegmeister. New York: American Music League/ Carl Fischer, 1936.
_____. Me and My Captain. vol. 2 "Negro Songs of Protest." Arranged by Lan Adomian. New York: Hours Press, 1939.
_____. "Negro Songs of Protest: North and South Carolina, and Georgia." in Negro Anthology. Edited by Nancy Cunard. London: N. Cunard and Wisehart, 1934.
Goines, Leonard. "The Music of the Georgia and Carolina Sea Islands." Allegro. vol. 74 (1974) 5.
Gonzales, Ambrose E. The Black Border, Gullah Sketches of the Carolina Coast. Columbia, S.C., 1922.
_____. The Captain: Stories of the Black Border. Columbia: The State Co., 1924.
_____. Laguerre, A Gascon of the Black Border. Columbia, 1924.
_____. Two Gullah Tales: The Turkey Hunter and At the Cross Roads Store. New York: 1926.
_____. With Aesop Along the Black Border. Columbia, 1924.
Goodwin, W.T. and Gold, Peter. "From 'Easter Sunrise Sermon.'" Alcheringa. no. 4 (New York, 1972) 1-14.
Gordon, Asa H. Sketches of Negro Life and History in South Carolina. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 1971.
Gordon, Robert W. "The Negro Spiritual." in The Carolina Low Country. Edited by Augustine T. Smythe, New York: MacMillan, 1931. 191-222.
Gray, Lewis C. A History of Agriculture in the Southern United States to 1860. 2 vols., New York: Peter Smith, 1941.
Graydon, Nell S. Tales of Edisto. Atlanta: Tupper and Love, 1960.
_____. "Tales of Winnsboro and Fairfield County. State Magazine. (September 19, 1954) 10-11.
Green, Archie. "Dorsey Dixon: Minstrel of the Mills." Sing Out. vol. 16, no. 3 (June-July, 1966) 10-12.
Green, Edwin Luther. Indians of South Carolina. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press. 1920.
Greer, Georgeanna H. "Preliminary Information on the Use of the Alkaline Glaze for Stoneware in the South: 1800-1920." in Conference on Historic Site Archeology, Papers, 1970. Edited by Stanley South, Columbia: Institute of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of South Carolina, 1971, 145-170.
_____. "Alkaline Glazes and Groundhog Kilns: Southern Pottery Traditions." Antiques. vol. 111 (April, 1977) 768-773.
_____. "Groundhog Kilns--Rectangular American Kilns of the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries." Northeast Historical Archeology. vol. 6 (1977) 42-54.
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Last Updated on 3/06/2001
Entered by Gary Stanton
Email: gstanton@umw.edu