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Father Abbot, or, The Home Tourist; a MedleyJournalism | 1849
Father Abbot collects together a series
of related political fictions Simms wrote for the Charleston Mercury from September to November 1849.[1] Here, the author revealed his significant wit
and complex thinking about social, political, and philosophical issues through
the perambulations of the titular Father Abbot about Charleston and its
environs. As Father Abbot travels
around the city with various companions, its economic and political future are
discussed; this conceit allowed Simms to use his satirical gifts to create a
humorous, yet biting, commentary on the socioeconomic ... |
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Sack and Destruction of the City of Columbia, S. C.Journalism | Power Press of Daily Phœnix | 1865 One of the more important,
though most-lightly studied, of Simms’s works is Sack and Destruction of the City of Columbia, SC, a narrative
recounting of William Tecumseh Sherman’s entry into and occupation of South
Carolina’s capital city, and its subsequent destruction in the waning days of
the Civil War. Simms originally
published Sack and Destruction
serially in The Columbia Phoenix, “a
small newspaper edited by Simms that commenced publication in the waning weeks
of the Confederacy” from the newspaper’s first edition until 10 April 1865; after
the close of the War, ... |