150:. The title shifted over time to reflect these absorptions; it was known as The Southern Cultivator and Dixie Farmer from the 1880s until 1926, and as Southern Cultivator and Farming in 1926 and 1927, and once again as Southern Cultivator from 1928 to 1935. It was renamed Southern Farmer in 1935.
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The primary readership of the journal was
Southern planters. As a result, much of the content focused on agricultural matters. However, it also published articles about politics, education and literature. Indeed, the
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has been said to be "the
Confederacy's oldest, strongest, and intellectually most impressive agricultural journal." Its editors were Dennis Redmond and Charles Wallace Howard. Its publisher was J. P. Harrison.
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read, "Devoted to
Southern Agriculture, Designed to improve the Mind, and Elevate the Characters of the Tillers of the Soil, and to Introduce a More Enlightened System of Culture.".
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A large number of poems written by
Confederate poets were published in its pages. They also described books published in the North as "evil." Moreover, author
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Confederate Minds: The
Struggle for Intellectual Independence in the Civil War South: The Struggle for Intellectual Independence in the Civil War South
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Alias Bill Arp: Charles Henry Smith and the South's Goodly
Heritage
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Defunct agricultural magazines published in the United States
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is a defunct agrarian publication that was published in the
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Among its pages, some readers also discussed the recipe of
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The journal was started by J. W. Jones and W. S. Jones in
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50:Charles Wallace Howard
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172:Southern Cultivator'
16:American publication
323:Southern Cultivator
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28:J. W. Jones
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213:References
25:Founder(s)
35:Publisher
248:WorldCat
168:Bill Arp
63:Language
154:Content
144:Atlanta
109:History
66:English
55:Founded
161:byline
45:Editor
187:Texas
92:The
76:1935
58:1843
185:in
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