Refined by:
- Genre: Speech (x)
- Publication date: 2010s (x)
- Creator: W. Gilmore Simms (x)
- Holding Institution: University of South Carolina, South Caroliniana Library (x)
- Time period
![]() |
The Sources of American IndependenceBritish Colonial History | Speech | The Town Council of Aiken, SC | 1844
The Sources of
American Independence. An Oration, on the Sixty-Ninth Anniversary of American
Independence was delivered by William Gilmore Simms on 4 July 1844 in
Aiken, SC. As its long title suggests,
the speech was composed to celebrate the sixty-nine years of American
nationhood since the Declaration of Independence; what is unmentioned in the
title but equally relevant to an understanding of this work is the fact that it
was composed essentially as a stump speech[1]
during Simms’s successful 1844 run for a seat in the South Carolina State
Legislature. Giving a speech ... |
![]() |
The Sense of the Beautiful.Civil War and Early Reconstruction | Speech | Agricultural Society of South Carolina | 1870 Simms delivered The Sense of the Beautiful, his final
public oration, on May 3, 1870, a little over a month before his death.[1] The occasion was the first Floral Fair
held by the Charleston County Agricultural and Horticultural Society, a group
that would merge in August with the older and recently revived Agricultural
Society of South Carolina. In his
speech, Simms stressed the importance of natural beauty, a harmonious home
life, and female leadership. He praised
the spiritual value of the natural world and claimed that a stable domestic
sphere was a precondition for the progress ... |