Skip to main content

Categories

 


 

The Maryland History and Culture Bibliography

Menard, Russell R. "Population, Economy, and Society in Seventeenth-Century Maryland." Maryland Historical Magazine 79 (Spring 1984): 71- 92.
Notes: Menard examines some of the complex social and economic patterns underlying the rapid population growth of Maryland during the seventeenth century despite strong in-migration, high mortality, a shortage of females, and later marriage which often produced unstable family life. Tobacco exports rose dramatically, but the economy eventually suffered from over-dependence on a single crop. Though the colony was established with aristocratic goals, immigrants and their offspring initially created a social and economic pattern in which small planters predominated. However, by the century's end a new gentry class clearly had emerged in an order characterized by greater dependence on slave labor, a decline of indentured servitude, and heightened degrees of inequality.

Walsh, Lorena S. "Feeding Eighteenth-Century Tidewater Town Folk, or, Whence the Beef?" Agricultural History 73 (Summer 1999): 267-80.

Carr, Lois Green, and Lorena S. Walsh. "The Planter's Wife: The Experience of White Women in Seventeenth Century Maryland." William and Mary Quarterly, 3rd series 34 (October 1977): 542-71.
Notes: Most women coming to Maryland in the seventeenth century were indentured servants between ages eighteen and twenty-five. Hard work in the tobacco fields, late marriage, and early death awaited them. However, for the woman who survived seasoning and their period of service, the sexual imbalance let them choose her husband and seize the opportunity to become a planter's wife. She risked childbirth, bore three to four children, and hoped one or two lived to adulthood. Widows remarried quickly, and complex families were the norm.

Hood, Margaret School. Margaret School Hood Diary, 1851-1861. Camden, ME: Picton Press, 1992.

Lawson, Joanne Seale. "Remarkable Foundations: Rose Ishbel Greely, Landscape Architect." Washington History 10 (Spring 1998): 46-69.

Sarudy, Barbara Wells. "An Interview with Dr. Therese O'Malley." Maryland Humanities (July/August 1994): 12-15.

Bergstrom, Peter V. "Leah and Rachel Revisited: Everyday Life in the Colonial Chesapeake." Reviews in American History 12 (1984): 176-181.

Burton, Arthur G., and Richard W. Stephenson. "John Ballendine's Eighteenth-century Map of Virginia." Quarterly Journal of the Library of Congress 21 (1964): 172-178.

Cunningham, Isabel Shipley. "The Smith Farm Survives Mid-Century Agricultural Decline." Anne Arundel County History Notes 31 (January 2000): 3-4, 12-14.

Cunningham, Isabel Shipley. "The Smith Farm Survives Mid-Century Agricultural Decline-Conclusion." Anne Arundel County History Notes 31 (April 2000): 3-4, 8-10.

Daniels, Christine. "Gresham's Laws: Labor Management on an Early-eighteenth-century Chesapeake Plantation." Journal of Southern History 62 (1996): 205-238.

Davis, Curtis Carroll. "'A National Property:' Richard Claiborne's Tobacco Treatise for Poland." William and Mary Quarterly 21 (1964): 93-117.

Dillon, Clarissa Flint. 'A Large, an Useful, and a Grateful Field': Eighteenth-Century Kitchen Gardens in Southeastern Pennsylvania, the Uses of the Plants, and Their Place in Women's Work. (Vol. 1-2) Ph.D. diss., Bryn Mawr College, 1986.

Dunn, Richard S. "Quantifying the History of the Chesapeake in the Eighteenth Century." Reviews in American History 15 (1987): 563-568.

Fromm, Roger W. "The Migration and Settlement of Pennsylvania Germans in Maryland, Virginia, and North Carolina and Their Effects on the Landscape." Pennsylvania Folklife 37 (1987): 33-42.

Fusonie, Alan E. "Sources for Farm Policy Research at the National Agricultural Library." Agricultural History 70 (1996): 449-454.

Hayter, Earl W. "Livestock-fencing Conflicts in Rural America." Agricultural History 37 (1963): 10-20.

Herndon, G. Melvin. "Hemp in Colonial Virginia." Agricultural History 37 (1963): 86-93.

Jensen, Joan M. Loosening the Bonds: Mid-Atlantic Farm Women, 1750-1850. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1986.

Keller, Allan. "The Catholics in Maryland." Early American Life 9 (1978): 18-21, 78-79.

Kepler, Jon. "Estimates of the Volume of Direct Shipments of Tobacco and Sugar from the Chief English Plantations to European Markets, 1620-1669." Journal of European Economic History [Italy] 28 (no. 1, 1999): 115-36.

Langley, Susan B. M. "Tongues in Trees: Archaeology, Dendrochronology, and the Mulberry Landing Wharf." Maryland Historical Magazine 95 (Fall 2000): 338-48.

Lemon, James T. "The Agricultural Practices of National Groups in Eighteenth-Century Southeastern Pennsylvania." Geographical Review 56 (1966): 467-496.

Lewis, John Sherwood. Becoming Appalachia: The Emergence of an American Subculture, 1840-1860. Ph.D. diss., University of Kentucky, 2000.

Long, Amos, Jr. "Pennsylvania Corncribs." Pennsylvania Folklife 14 (1964): 16-23.

Back to Top