The Tar Heel State: A History of North Carolina | Milton Ready | Teaching NC History
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The Tar Heel State...
The Tar Heel State: A History of North Carolina
Milton Ready
University of South Carolina Press
, 2005 - 404 pages
average customer review:
based on 7 reviews
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highly recommended
The most inclusive
history
of
North
Carolina
to date. In the last three decades, North Carolina has witnessed a remarkable growth in population, economic development, and political importance, and it now ranks as the tenth most populous
state
in the Union. "The
Tar
Heel
State: A History of North Carolina" constitutes the most comprehensive and inclusive single-volume chronicle of the state's storied past to date, culminating with an attentive look at recent events that have transformed North Carolina into a southern mega state. The first such volume in more than two decades, Milton Ready's work offers a distinctive view of the state's history that integrates tales of famous pioneers, statesmen, soldiers, farmers, captains of industry, and community leaders with more marginalized voices, including those of Native Americans, African Americans, and women. Ready gives readers a view of North Carolina that encompasses perspectives from the coast, "tobacco road," the Piedmont, and the mountains. Ready revisits dramatic struggles of the American Revolution and Civil War, the early history of Cherokees, the rise of industrial mills, and the changes wrought by modern information-based technologies since 1970. Mixing spirited anecdotes and illustrative statistics, Ready describes the rich Native American culture found by John White in 1585, the chartered chaos of North Carolina's proprietary settlement, and the chronic distrust of government that grew out of settlement patterns and the colony's early political economy. He challenges the perception of relaxed intellectualism attributed to the "Rip van Winkle" state, the notion that slavery was a benign institution in North Carolina, and the commonly accepted interpretation of Reconstruction in the state. Ready also discusses how the suffrage movement pushed North Carolina into a hesitant twentieth-century progressivism. In perhaps his most significant contribution to North Carolina's historical record, Ready continues his narrative past the benchmark of World War II and into the twenty-first century. From the civil rights struggle to the building of research triangles, triads, and parks, Ready recounts the events that have fueled North Carolina's accelerated development in recent years and the many challenges that have accompanied such rapid growth.
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Histor y of N.C.
A well written, east to read
History
of N.C.. Ready provides enough detail, yet at the same time keeps the subject matter flowing.
Teaching NC History
I am working towards getting my teaching license and this book was recommended for teaching NC
history
. It is an excellent book!
The Tar Heel State: A History of North Carolina by Milton Ready
An excellent well documented and detailed
history
of the
State
of
North
Carolina
; which makes this book an excellent read and resource book. If your historical interest and focus is on the State of North Carolina, this is a must read along with Dr.Milton Ready's book, "Remembering Asheville".
North Carolina survey history
Unlike the posters for the Bob Dylan concert I attended a couple of years ago that placed Asheville in South
Carolina
, the publisher's identity is not a typo, but it might be the punchline of a good joke.
Survey
history
of
North
Carolina establishes the beginnings of the
state
as a poor step-child to Virginia and South Carolina due to its lack of major cities, the barrier islands blocking shipping, its east-west orientation merging disparate regions and populations, and its North-South flowing rivers that drove commerce across its borders.
It also traces its hesitant political history as reluctant signators to the Constitution, then reluctant secessionists to the Confederacy and reluctant and split participants in the war (despite the highest per capita dead and wounded in the conflict), then somewhat enlightened New Southerners afterward.
Despite some awkward writing (Ready is a stronger historian then a writer), and an inexplicable complete bypassing of the 1920s, the survey covers the main scope and sweep of NC history well.
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Repeats the same old story
Very little new here, esp. for the colonial period. Author repeats many stories or views that are inaccurate or myths.
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