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The DARIEN JOURNAL OF JOHN GIRARDEAU LEGARE, RICEGROWER (Hardcover, Revised)
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The DARIEN JOURNAL OF JOHN GIRARDEAU LEGARE, RICEGROWER (Hardcover, Revised)
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In 1877, John Girardeau Legare of Adams Run, South Carolina,
arrived in Darien on the Georgia tidewater. Legare managed
Darien-area rice plantations, first at Generals Island, then at
Champneys. Nearby was Butler's Island, made famous by Fanny Kemble
Butler in her antebellum "Journal of a Residence on a Georgian
Plantation." Legare also served as the clerk of the city of Darien
during the first three decades of the twentieth century,
maintaining detailed records of public business and documenting
local commercial and civic affairs.
Almost to the day of his death in 1932, Legare kept a journal
containing his observations and commentary on the development of
Darien as a center for timber exports and the gradual decline of
the rice industry. South Carolina and Georgia led the world in rice
production in the mid-nineteenth century, and Legare's detailed
accounts of planting and management provide one of the outstanding
contemporary sources for what was becoming a vanishing way of life
in tidewater Georgia.
Legare's journals are a microcosmic history of Darien and its
environs during a time that was perhaps the most compelling in the
town's history. The industrial development of Darien in the
postbellum era was the essence of Henry Grady's vision of the
progressive New South, a factor not lost on Legare. He reflects on
the difficulties associated with rice planting; Darien's soaring,
then plummeting, fortunes with yellow pine timber; prominent
community members; and the development of local railroads. Legare
records these developments against the larger backdrop of America,
as his journal contains many observations on contemporary national
events.
Buddy Sullivan has placed the "Journal" in context with an
introduction and comprehensive endnotes identifying the people and
events referred to by Legare. There is also considerable African
American history in the volume, as reflected both in Legare's
writings and in the editor's introduction and supplementary notes.
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