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“An Educated and Intelligent People Cannot be Enslaved”: The Struggle for Common Schools in Antebellum Spartanburg, South Carolina

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 February 2017

Extract

As the political conflict over slavery's fate in the West intensified through the summer of 1849, Peter M. Wallace, editor of the Spartanburg Carolina Spartan, vowed that he was “utterly opposed now and forever to all political compromises” on the issue of slavery. Significantly, Wallace connected the success of such southern resistance to the improvement of South Carolina's free schools. The Carolina Spartan's columns, the editor explained, “will be open to the advocates of a more liberal but judicious appropriation of the public money” for common schooling because “an educated and intelligent people, cannot be enslaved.” Wallace was one of many antebellum Spartanburg leaders who linked schooling with southern nationalism and used slavery as a metaphor for dependence on northern institutions. In the process, these men espoused what historians often view as a very un-southern idea—liberal government support for public education—and contrasted it with an image central to the definition of southern white republicanism—the ignorant slave.

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Copyright © 2004 by the History of Education Society 

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References

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53 Ibid. 181. Harris did succeed in getting a school started ten days later at his house with ten students under Mary Lanford's instruction, 183. The following June, Harris was pleased with his children's instruction but again expressed his annoyance that he had to arrange everything “to please others and pay all expense myself,” 198.Google Scholar

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72 Carolina Spartan, December 21, 1854 and January 4, 1855. The final vote in the House was 51 yeas and 55 nays. See Carolina Spartan, December 20, 1855.Google Scholar

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76 Ibid, July 31, August 7, 14, 21, 28, 1856.Google Scholar

77 Ibid, August 21, 1856.Google Scholar

78 Ibid, March 18, 1858.Google Scholar