Cover of Lynn A. Nelson: Pharsalia

Lynn A. Nelson Pharsalia

An Environmental Biography of a Southern Plantation, 1780-1880

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University of Georgia Press

2010

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978-0-8203-3602-2

0-8203-3602-5

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Pharsalia, a plantation located in piedmont Virginia at the foot of the Blue Ridge Mountains, is one of the best-documented sites of its kind. Drawing on the exceptionally rich trove of papers left behind by the Massie family, Pharsalias owners, this case study demonstrates how white southern planters paradoxically relied on capitalistic methods even as they pursued an ideal of agrarian independence. Lynn A. Nelson also shows how the contradictions between these ends and means would later manifest themselves in the southern conservation movement.Nelson follows the fortunes of Pharsalias owners, telling how Virginias traditional extensive agriculture contributed to the soils erosion and exhaustion. Subsequent attempts to balance independence and sustainability through a complex system of crop rotation and resource recycling ultimately gave way to an intensive, slave-based form of agricultural capitalism.Pharsalia could not support the Massies aristocratic ambitions, and it was eventually parceled up and sold off by family members. The farms story embodies several fundamentals of modern U.S. environmental thought. Southerners nineteenth-century quest for financial and ecological independence provided the background for conservationists attempts to save family farming. At the same time, farmers failure to achieve independence while maximizing profits and crop yields drove them to seek government aid and regulation. These became some of the hallmarks of conservation efforts in the New Deal and beyond.

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