Refined by:
- Genre: Novel (Romance) (x)
- Publication date: 1820s (x)
- Creator: Anonymous [William Gilmore Simms] (x)
- Places of publication: New York, NY (x)
- Subject heading
- Beaufort (S.C.) -- Fiction (1)
- Frontier and pioneer life -- Fiction (1)
- Frontier and pioneer life -- South Carolina -- Fiction. (1)
- Historical fiction. (1)
- Indians of North America -- Fiction. (1)
- Indians of North America -- South Carolina -- Fiction. (1)
- South Carolina -- History -- Colonial period, ca. 1600-1775 -- Fiction (1)
- South Carolina -- History -- Revolution, 1775-1783 -- Fiction. (2)
- United States -- History -- Revolution, 1775-1783 -- Fiction (2)
- Yamassee Indians -- Fiction (1)
- Time period
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Mellichampe: A Legend of the SanteeNovel (Romance) | Harper & Brothers | 1836 The second of eight novels in the Revolutionary War series,
William Gilmore Simms’s Mellichampe was originally published
by Harper in 1836, then revised and republished in the Redfield edition in
1854. The story follows the fictional band of Francis Marion’s partisans
in the fall of 1780 after the Battle of Camden, as they engage in guerrilla
warfare on the Santee River against loyalist and British forces. In his
advertisement to the first edition, Simms considered Mellichampe a
“Historical romance” that accurately conveyed the career of Marion[1] to the “very ... |
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The Partisan: A Tale of the RevolutionNovel (Romance) | Harper & Brothers | 1835
The Partisan: A Tale of the Revolution (1835) was the first composed of Simms’s
series of romances about the Revolutionary War, though the second in the
series’ overall chronology. The Partisan was also the
first of a “trilogy” of closely-related novels within Simms’s overall
Revolutionary War saga, sharing characters and other links with Mellichampe (1836)
and Katherine Walton (1851).[1] The
novel deals with the 1780 Battle of Camden and its aftermath, especially the
guerilla warfare tactics employed by “The Swamp Fox,” General Francis Marion,
and other ... |
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The Yemassee. A Romance of Carolina.Novel (Romance) | Harper & Brothers | 1835 The Yemassee is historically the best known of
the long fictions of William Gilmore Simms.
Set on the South Carolina frontier, Simms’s third book-length fiction
treats the Yemassee War of 1715-17, when the Yemassee Indians, with their
Spanish and Native American allies, attacked the low country colonial
settlements. Writing in the midst of the
removal of natives from east of the Mississippi to the newly created Indian
Territory in the future Oklahoma, Simms emphasized such motives for the war as
the colonists’ need for land, the conflict between rival European powers ... |