Refined by:
- Time period: Revolutionary History (x)
- Engraver: Whtiney & Jocelyn SC (x)
- Places of publication: New York, NY (x)
- Genre
- Novel (Romance) (1)
- Short Stories (1)
- Publication date
- Subject heading
- Eutaw Springs, Battle of, S.C., 1781 -- Fiction. (1)
- Frontier and pioneer life -- Fiction (1)
- Indians of North America -- Fiction. (1)
- South Carolina -- History -- Revolution, 1775-1783 -- Fiction. (1)
- Southern States -- Social life and customs -- Fiction. (1)
- Southwest, Old -- Fiction (1)
- United States -- History -- Revolution, 1775-1783 -- Fiction (1)
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EutawNovel (Romance) | Redfield | 1856
Eutaw,
published by Redfield on 19 April 1856, is the sequel to The Forayers,
and the penultimate romance in Simms's Revolutionary War saga[1]. It completes the story of the British withdrawal
from their outpost at Ninety-Six, including the battle of Eutaw Springs, the
last major engagement of the Carolina theatre, and its aftermath. Simms’s biographer John Caldwell Guilds notes
that it is necessary to understand Eutaw as a sequel, as it was “not a
new venture but the extension and completion of a scheme which kept expanding
in the author's fertile imagination.”[2] ... |
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The Wigwam and the CabinShort Stories | Redfield | 1856 Originally
published by Wiley and Putnam in two volumes—the first series in October 1845 and
the second in February 1846—for the Library of American Books series, The Wigwam and the Cabin is a collection
of border stories about the southwestern frontier. Simms best summarized the collection in a
dedicatory letter to his father-in-law for the 1856 Redfield edition: “One word
for the material of these legends. It is
local, sectional—and to be national
in literature, one must needs be sectional. No one mind can fully or fairly illustrate
the characteristics of any great ... |