Black Urban Leisure Pursuits and Cultural Identity in Eighteenth-Century South Carolina and Georgia

Will Boulware
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Abstract

On the eve of revolution Josiah Quincy Jr., both on the advice of his doctor and in order to satisfy his own curiosity, departed Massachusetts and for several months integrated himself amongst South Carolina's ruling elite. Rubbing elbows in the spring of 1773 with the wealthiest gentry in North America, the visiting Bostonian was struck that 'in grandeur, splendour. . .in almost everything, [Charleston] far surpasses all I ever saw, or expected to see, in America' . Quincy also left with the opinion that this opulent world governed by 'lordly planters' was a haven where 'cards, dice, the bottle and horses engross prodigious portions of time and attention', and whose 'gentlemen ... are mostly men of the turf and gamesters'. Indeed, the enormous fiscal prosperity and notorious leisured excesses of the lowcountry's elite rarely escaped the commentary of contemporary visitors and inhabitants alike. Nor have the subjects suffered a lack of scholarship by modem historians. However, it was Quincy's observations of a great number of blacks playing English games of chance in Charleston and that Sundays were generally a day of 'license, pastime and frolic for the negroes' which warrants closer attention. While the urban leisure habits of blacks may very well have come as a mild shock to the visiting northerner, they had been in reality a long-standing facet of everyday life in Carolina.I
18世纪南卡罗来纳和乔治亚州黑人城市休闲追求与文化认同
革命前夕,小乔赛亚·昆西听从医生的建议,也为了满足自己的好奇心,离开了马萨诸塞州,并在几个月的时间里融入了南卡罗来纳的统治精英。1773年春天,这位来访的波士顿人与北美最富有的绅士们接触,他被“在宏伟,辉煌……在几乎所有方面,[查尔斯顿]远远超过了我在美国所见过的,或期望看到的”所震惊。昆西离开时还认为,这个由“贵族种植园主”统治的富裕世界是一个避风港,“纸牌、骰子、瓶子和马占据了大量的时间和精力”,“绅士们……大多是草皮和赌徒的人。的确,这个低地国家的精英阶层巨大的财政繁荣和臭名昭著的悠闲挥霍,很少逃过当代游客和居民的评论。现代历史学家也没有对这些主题缺乏学术研究。然而,昆西观察到,在查尔斯顿有很多黑人在玩英式碰运气游戏,而星期天通常是“黑人尽情玩耍、消遣和嬉戏”的日子,这一点值得更密切的关注。虽然黑人在城市的休闲习惯很可能会让来访的北方人感到轻微的震惊,但实际上,这些习惯在卡罗来纳州的日常生活中一直存在。我
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