Contexte de l’époque
(Ouvrages généraux, Sud, Tennessee, plantation et planteurs [famille, communauté], esclavage, éducation)

  1. Abernethy Thomas Perkins. The Formative Period in Alabama, 1815-1828 (1922), 1990.
  2. Abernethy Thomas Perkins. “The Political Geography of Southern Jacksonism.” ETHSP. 3 (1931), 35-41.
  3. Abernethy Thomas Perkins. From Frontier to Plantation: A Study in Frontier Democracy. Chapel Hill: U of North Carolina P, 1932.
  4. Ahearn Marie L. The Rhetoric of War: Training Day, the Militia, and the Military Sermon. New York: Greenwood, 1989.
  5. Anderson James Douglas. Making the American Thoroughbred. especially in Tennessee. including Reminiscences of the Turf. by Bailie Payton. Norwood (Mass.): Plimpton, 1916.
  6. Arnow Harriette Simpson. “The Pioneer Farmer and his Crops in the Cumberland Region.” THQ. Vol. XIX 4 (Dec. 1960), 291-327.
  7. Bacon H. Phillip. “Nashville's Trade at the Beginning of the 19th Century.” THQ. Vol.X 1 (March 1956), 30-38.
  8. Bailyn Bernard.The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution (1967). Cambridge: Harvard UP, 1992.
  9. Baines Edward. History of the Cotton Manufacture in Great Britain (1835), 2nd ed. Londres: Frank Cass, 1966.
  10. Barker Charles A. American Convictions: Cycles of Public Thought, 1600-1850. Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott, 1970.
  11. Barnhart John D. “The Tennessee Constitution of 1796: A Product of the Old West.” JSH. Vol. IX 4 (Nov. 1943), 532-548.
  12. Basch Norma. “Marriage, Morals, and Politics in the Elections of 1828.” JAH. Vol. 80 n° 3 (Dec. 1993), 890-918.
  13. Bassett John S., ed. “Some Unpublished Letters of Nathaniel Macon.” Historical Papers. Durham. (NC): The Historical Society of Trinity College, n.d.
  14. Blake Russell Lindley. Ties of Intimacy: Social Values and Personal Relationship of Antebellum Slaveholders. diss. U of Michigan, 1978.
  15. Blassingame John W. The Slave Community: Plantation Life in the Antebellum South (1972). New York: OUP, 1979.
  16. Boller Paul F., Jr. “Religion and the U.S. Presidency.” The Journal of Church and State. Vol. 1 n° 1 (Winter 1979), 5-21.
  17. Boorstin Daniel J. The Lost World of Thomas Jefferson (1948). Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1993.
  18. Braden Guy B. “The Colberts and the Chicasaw Nation.” 2 parts.THQ. Vol. XVII, (Sept. 1958), 222-249; Vol. XVII 4 (Dec. 1958), 319-335.
  19. Breen T. H. “Horses and Gentlemen: The Cultural Significance of Gambling among the Gentry of Virginia.” WMQ, 3rd series. Vol. XXXIV nº 2 (April 1977), 239-257.
  20. Bretz Julian P. “Early Land Communication with the Lower Mississippi Valley.” MVHR. Vol. XIII n° 1 (June 1926), 3-29.
  21. Bridges William E. “Family Patterns and Social Values in America, 1825-1875.” AQ. XVII 1 (Spring 1965), 3-11.
  22. Broer Jill. “William Blount: Governor of the Southwest Territory (Tennessee), 1790-1796.” in Governors of Tennessee. I: 1790-1835. Charles W. Crawford ed. Memphis: Memphis State UP, 1979, 1-30.
  23. Brown John P. “Cherokee Removal: an Unnecessary Tragedy.” ETHSP 1 (1939), 11-19.
  24. Burns Frank. Davidson County. Tennessee County History Series. Robert B. Jones, ed. Memphis. Memphis State UP, 1989.
  25. Burton Orville V. In My Father's House are Many Mansions: Family and Community in Edgefield, South Carolina. Chapel Hill: U of North Carolina P, 1985.
  26. Burton Orville V. and Robert C. McMath. Jr., eds. Class, Conflict, and Consensus: Antebellum Southern Community Studies. Contributions in American History. Number 96. Wesport (Ct): Greenwood, 1982.
  27. Caldwell Mary French. Tennesssee, The Dangerous Example: Watauga to 1849. Nashville: Aurora, 1974.
  28. Cash W. J. The Mind of the South . New York: Vintage, 1941.
  29. Cashin Joan E. “The Structure of Antebellum Planter Families: ‘The Ties that Bound us Was Strong’.” JSH. Vol. LVI 1 (Feb. 1990), 55-70.
  30. Cashin Joan E. A Family Venture: Men and Women on the Southern Frontier. New York: OUP, 1991.
  31. Cassity Michael J. “Slaves. Families. and ‘Living Spaces’: A Note on Evidence and Historical Context”. Southern Studies. Vol. XVII nº 2 (Summer 1978), 209-215.
  32. Censer Jane Turner. North Carolina Planters and Their Children, 1800-1860. Baton-Rouge: Louisiana State UP, 1984.
  33. Censer Jane Turner. “‘Smiling Through Her Tears’: Ante-Bellum Southern Women and Divorce.” in Domestic Relations and Law, 2rd part of History of Women in the United States; Historical Articles on Women's Lives and Activities. Ed. Nancy F. Scott. New York: K. G. Saur, 1992. 34-55.
  34. Censer Jane Turner. ”Planters and the Southern Community: A Review Essay.” The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography. Vol. 4 4 (Oct. 1986), 387-408.
  35. Chaplin Joyce E. “Creating a Cotton South in Georgia and South Carolina, 1760-1815.” JSH. Vol. LVII 2 (May 1991), 171-200.
  36. Clark Thomas D. Frontier America (1959). New York: Charles Scribner’s, 1969.
  37. Clinton Catherine. The Plantation Mistress:Woman’s World in the Old South. New York: Pantheon, 1982.
  38. Cook William C. “The Early Iconography of the Batthe of New Orleans, 1815-1819.” THQ. Vol. XLVIII n° 4 (Winter 1989), 218-237.
  39. Copeland J. Isaac. “The Tutor in the Ante-bellum South.” The Proceedings of the South Carolina Historical Association. (1965), 36-47.
  40. Cress Lawrence Delbert. Citizens in Arms: The Army and the Militia in American Society to the War of 1812. Chapel Hill: U of North Carolina P, 1982.
  41. Crowther Edward R. “Antebellum Community Support for Judson and Howard Colleges.” The Alabama Review. Vol. XLIV 1 (Jan. 1991), 17-35.
  42. Curtin Philip D. The Rise and Fall of the Plantation Complex: Essays in Atlantic History. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1990.
  43. De Forest Elizabeth Kellam. The Gardens and Grounds at Mount Vernon: How George Washington Planned and Planted Them. Mt. Vernon: The Mt. Vernon Ladies Association of the Union, 1982.
  44. Doak H. M. “The Development of Education in Tennessee.” AHM. VIII (1903), 64-90.
  45. Dulce Berton et Edwaed J. Richter. Religion and the Presidency: A Recurring American Problem. New York: Macmillan, 1962.
  46. Durham Walter T. “The Southwest and Northwest Territories: A Comparison, 1787-1796.” THQ. Vol. 9 n° 3 (Fall 1990), 188-196.
  47. Eaton Clement. “Southern Senators and the Right of Instruction, 1789-1860.” JSH. Vol. XVIII 3 (Aug. 1952), 303-319.
  48. Ellworth Lucius F., ed. The Americanization of the Gulf Coast, 1803-1850. Pensacola: Historic Pensacola Preservation Board, 1972.
  49. Faust Drew Gilpin. The Ideology of Slavery: Proslavery Thought in the Antebellum South. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State UP, 1981.
  50. Faust Drew Gilpin. Southern Stories: Slaveholders in War and Peace. Columbia: U of Missouri, 1992.
  51. Feller Daniel. The Jacksonian Promise: America, 1815-1840. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 1995.
  52. Feller Daniel. The Public Lands in Jacksonian Politics. Madison: U of Wisconsin P, 1984.
  53. Ferling John E. A Wilderness of Miseries: War and Warriors in Early America. Westport, Ct: Greenwood, 1980.
  54. Fisher David H. Albion's Seed: Four British Folkways in America. New York: OUP, 1989.
  55. Folmsbee Stanley J. “Blount College and East Tennessee College, 1794-1840: The First Predecessors of the University of Tennessee.” ETHSP. 7 (1945), 22-50.
  56. Folmsbee Stanley J, Robert E. Corlew, Enoch L. Mitchell. Tennessee: A Short History (1969). Knoxville: U of Tennessee P, 1972.
  57. Formisano Ronald P. “The Deferential-Participant Politics: The Early Republic's Political Culture, 1789-1840.” The American Political Science Review. Vol. LXVIII 2 (June 1974), 473-487.
  58. Fox-Genovese Elizabeth. Within the Plantation Household: Black and White Women of the Old South. Chapel Hill: U of North Carolina P, 1988.
  59. Fox-Genovese Elizabeth. “Antebellum Southern Households: A New Perspective on a Familiar Question.” in Household Constitution and Family Relationship, 2nd part of History of Women in the United States; Historical Articles on Women's Lives and Activities. Ed. Nancy F. Scott. New York: K. G. Saur, 1992. 111-149.
  60. Franklin John H. et Loren Schweninger. Runaway Slaves. Rebels on the Plantation New York: OUP, 1999.
  61. Fraser John. America and the Patterns of Chivalry. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1982.
  62. Frazer Jr.. Walter J.. R. Frank Saunders. and Jon L. Wakelyn. The Web of Southern Social Relations. Athens: U of Georgia P, 1985.
  63. Frizzell John. Proceedings of the M. W. Grand Lodge. F. & A. M. of the State of Tennessee, from its Organization. Vol. I, 1813-1847. Nashville: Southern Methodist Publishing House, 1873.
  64. Gammon Jr. S. R. The Presidential Campaign of 1832 . Baltimore, 1922.
  65. Gara Larry, ed. “A New Englander's View of Plantation Life: Letters of Edwin Hall to Cyrus Woodman, 1837.” JSH. Vol. XVIII (Feb.-Nov. 1952), 343-354.
  66. Gauthier Michel. Le Sud des États-Unis dans les relations de voyage britanniques (1783-1837). thèse de doctorat (95/BOR3/0042). univ. Bordeaux 3, 1268 pp, 1995.
  67. Genovese Eugene. Roll. Jordan. Roll: The World the Slaves Made. New York: Random, 1974.
  68. Genovese Eugene. “The Significance of the Slave Plantation for Southern Economic Development.” JSH. Vol. XXVIII nº 4 (Nov. 1962), 422-437.
  69. Goldman Perry M. “Political Rhetoric in the Age of Jackson.” THS. XXIX 4 (Winter 1970), 360-371.
  70. Goodheart Lawrence B. Neil Hanks. and Elizabeth Johnson. “‘An Act for the Relief of Females...’: Divorce and the Changing Legal Status of Women in Tennessee, 1796-1860.” parts I & II. in Domestic Relations and Law, 3rd part of History of Women in the United States; Historical Articles on Women's Lives and Activities. Ed. Nancy F. Scott. New York: K. G. Saur, 1992, 90-116.
  71. Goodstein Anita Shafer. Nashville, 1780-1860: From Frontier to City. Gainesville: U of Florida P, 1989.
  72. Grund Francis G. Aristocracy in America: from the Sketchbook of a German Nobleman (1839). New York: Harper, 1959.
  73. Guild J. O. Old Times in Tennessee, with Historical, Personal, and Political Scraps and Sketches (1878). Nashville: Tavel, Eastman &Howell, 1995.
  74. Hagler D. Harland. “The Ideal Woman in the Antebellum South: Lady or Farmwife.” JSH. Vol. XLVI nº 3 (Aug. 1980), 405-418.
  75. Hamer Philip M. “A Muster Roll of Captain Jacob Tipton's company in St. Clair's Campaign.” ETHSP, 3 (1931), 150-153.
  76. Hamilton William B. “The Southwestern Frontier, 1795-1817: An Essay in Social History.” JSH. Vol. X (Feb.-Nov. 1944), 389-403.
  77. Heffer Jean. L’union en péril: la démocratie et l’esclavage (1829-1865). in “Histoire Documentaire des États-Unis”. t. 4. Nancy : PUN, 1987.
  78. Henderson Archibald. The Conquest of the Old Southwest. The Romantic History of the Early Pioneers into Virginia, The Caroolinas, Tennessee, and Kentucky, 1740-1790. New York: The Century Co., 1923.
  79. Henig Gerald S. “The Jacksonian Attitude Towards Abolitionism in the 1830s.” THQ. Vol. XXVIII n° 1 (Spring 1969), 43-56.
  80. Hervey John. Racing in America, 1665-1865, 2 vols. New York: The Jockey Club, 1944.
  81. Hilliard Sam B. “Plantations and the molding of the Southern Landscape.” in The Making of the American Landscape (1990). Michael P. Conzen, ed. New York: Routledge, 1994.
  82. Holder Ray, ed. “My Dear Husband: Letters of a Plantation Mistress, Martha Dubose Winans to William Winans, 1834-1844.” JMH, XLIX 4 (Nov. 1987), 300-320.
  83. Holland Braun Kathryn E. “The Creek Indians, Blacks, and Slavery.” JSH. Vol. LVII 4 (Nov. 1991), 601-636.
  84. Holt Albert C. The Economic and Social Beginnings of Tennessee. Diss. George Peabody College. Nashville, 1923.
  85. Horton Paul. “The Culture, Social Structure, and Political Economy of Antebellum Lawrence County, Alabama.” The Alabama Review. Vol. XLI n° 4 (Oct. 1988), 243-270.
  86. Hudson Charles M. Red, White, and Black: Symposium on Indians in the Old South. Southern Anthropological Society Proceedings. nº 5. Athens: U of Georgia P, 1971.
  87. Ingraham J. H., ed.The Sunny South; or, The Southerner at home, Embracing Five Years' Experience of a Northern Governess in the Land of the Sugar and the Cotton (1860). New York: Negro UP, 1968.
  88. Jacobs Harriet A. Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl. Written by Herself. (1861). Cambridge: Harvard UP, 1987.
  89. Jacobs James Ripley. The Beginnings of the US Army, 1783-1812. Princeton, 1947.
  90. Jensen Merrill. The Founding of a Nation: A History of the American Revolution, 1763-1776. New York: OUP, 1968.
  91. Johnson Guion Griffis. “Courtship and Marriage Customs in Ante-bellum North Carolina.”The North Carolina Historical Review. VIII 4 (Oct. 1931), 384-402.
  92. Johnson Michael P.. “Planters and Patriarchy: Charleston, 1800-1860.” JSH. Vol. XLVI nº 3 (Feb. 1980), 45-72.
  93. Jordan Weymouth T. Hugh Davis and His Alabama Plantation. Alabama: U of Alabama P, 1948.
  94. Jordan Weymouth T. “Cotton Planters’ Conventions in the Old South.” JSH. Vol. XIX 3 (Aug. 1953), 321-345.
  95. Jordan Weymouth T. “The Management Rules of An Alabama Black Belt Plantation, 1848-1862.” Agricultural History. Vol. 8 (1944), 54-68.
  96. Joyner Charles. Down by the Riverside: A South Carolina Slave Community (1984). Chicago: U of Illinois P, 1985.
  97. Kane Joseph Nathan. Facts about the Presidents: a Compilation of Biographical and Historical Data. New York: H. W. Wilson, 1959.
  98. Keller Mark A. “Horse Racing Madness in the Old South—The Sporting Epistles of William J. Minor of Natchez (1837-1860).” JMH. Vol. XLVII 3 (Aug. 1985), 165-186.
  99. Kelsay Isabel Thompson . “The Presidential Campaign of 1828.” ETHSP. (1933), 69-80.
  100. Kemble Frances A. A Journal of Residence on a Georgian Plantation in 1838-1839 (1863). John A. Scott, ed. New York: Knopf, 1961.
  101. Klein Rachel N. Unification of a Slave State: The Rise of the Planter Class in the South Carolina Backcountry, 1760-1808. Chapel Hill: U of North Carolina P, 1990.
  102. Kohl Lawrence F. The Politics of Individualism: Parties and the American Character in the Jacksonian Era. New York: OUP, 1989.
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  105. Labbe Dolores Egger. “Mothers and Children in Antebellum Louisiana.” Louisiana History. Vol. XXXIV 2 (Spring 1993), 161-173.
  106. Lacy Eric Russell. Antebellum Tennessee: A Documentary History. Berkeley: McCutchan, 1969.
  107. Letters of Wyoming to the People of the United States, on the Presidential Election. in Favour of Andrew Jackson. Philadelphia: S. Simpson and J. Conrad, 1824.
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  109. Longaker Richard P. “Was Jackson's Kitchen Cabinet a Cabinet?” MVHR. XLIV 1 (June 1957), 94-108.
  110. Lucas M. Philip. “‘To Carry Out Great Fundamental Principles’: The Antebellum Southern Political Culture.” JMH. Vol. XLII 1 (Feb. 1990), 1-22.
  111. Luttrell Laura E. “A Hundred Years of a Female Academy: The Knoxville Female Academy, 1811-1846; The East Tennessee Female Institute, 1846-1911.” ETHSP. 7 (1945), 71-83.
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  119. McConnell Roland C. Negro Troops of Antebellum Louisiana: A History of the Battalion of Free men of Color. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State UP, 1968.
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  124. McMillen Sally G. “Antebellum Southern Fathers and the Health Care of Children.” JSH. Vol. LX 3 (Aug. 1994), 513-532.
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