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Heritage and Hoop Skirts - How Natchez Created the Old South (Hardcover)
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Heritage and Hoop Skirts - How Natchez Created the Old South (Hardcover)
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For over eighty years, tourists have flocked to Natchez,
Mississippi, seeking the "Old South," but what they encounter is
invention: a pageant and rewrite of history first concocted during
the Great Depression. In Heritage and Hoop Skirts: How Natchez
Created the Old South, author Paul Hardin Kapp reveals how the
women of the Natchez Garden Club saved their city, created one of
the first cultural tourism economies in the United States, changed
the Mississippi landscape through historic preservation, and
fashioned elements of the Lost Cause into an industry. Beginning
with the first Natchez Spring Pilgrimage of Antebellum Homes in
1932, such women as Katherine Grafton Miller, Roane Fleming Byrnes,
and Edith Wyatt Moore challenged the notion that smokestack
industries were key to Natchez’s prosperity. These women
developed a narrative of graceful living and aristocratic
gentlepeople centered on grand but decaying mansions. In crafting
this pageantry, they created a tourism magnet based on the
antebellum architecture of Natchez. Through their determination and
political guile, they enlisted New Deal programs, such as the WPA
Writers’ Project and the Historic American Buildings Survey, to
promote their version of the city. Their work did save numerous
historic buildings and employed both white and African American
workers during the Depression. Still, the transformation of Natchez
into a tourist draw came at a racial cost and further marginalized
African American Natchezians. By attending to the history of
preservation in Natchez, Kapp draws on a rich archive of images,
architectural documents, and popular culture to explore how meaning
is assigned to place and how meaning evolves over time. In showing
how and why the Natchez buildings of the "Old South" were first
preserved, commercialized, and transformed into a brand, this
volume makes a much-needed contribution to ongoing debates over the
meaning attached to cultural patrimony.
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