Seas of Gold, Seas of Cotton: Christophe Poulain DuBignon of Jekyll Island

Seas of Gold, Seas of Cotton: Christophe Poulain DuBignon of Jekyll Island

by Martha L. Keber
Seas of Gold, Seas of Cotton: Christophe Poulain DuBignon of Jekyll Island

Seas of Gold, Seas of Cotton: Christophe Poulain DuBignon of Jekyll Island

by Martha L. Keber

Paperback

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Overview

This detailed biography of a man who flourished in two very different worlds opens a new doorway into the societies of prerevolutionary France and postrevolutionary Georgia. Christophe Poulain DuBignon (1739-1825) was the son of an impoverished Bréton aristocrat. Breaking social convention to engage in trade, he began his long career first as a cabin boy in the navy of the French India Company and later as a sea captain and privateer. After retiring from the sea, DuBignon lived in France as a "bourgeois noble" with income from land, moneylending, and manufacturing.

Uprooted by the French Revolution, DuBignon fled to Georgia late in 1790, settling among other refugees from France and the Caribbean. A community long overlooked by historians of the American South, this circle of planters, nobles, and bourgeois was bound together by language, a shared faith, and the émigré experience.

On his Jekyll Island slave plantation, DuBignon learned to cultivate cotton. However, he underwrote his new life through investments on both sides of the Atlantic, extending his business ties to Charleston, Liverpool, and Nantes. None of his ventures, Martha L. Keber notes, compelled DuBignon to dwell long on the inconsistencies between his entrepreneurial drive and his noble heritage. His worldview always remained aristocratic, patriarchal, and conservative.

DuBignon's passage of eighty-six years took him from a tradition-bound Europe to the entrepôts of the Indian Ocean to the plantation culture of a Georgia barrier island. Wherever he went, commerce was the constant. Based on Keber's exhaustive research in European, African, and American archives, Seas of Gold, Seas of Cotton portrays a resilient nobleman so well schooled in the principles of the marketplace that he prospered in the Old World and the New.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780820357133
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
Publication date: 08/01/2019
Pages: 320
Product dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.25(h) x (d)

About the Author

MARTHA L. KEBER is a professor of history at Georgia College & State University.

MARTHA L. KEBER is a professor of history at Georgia College & State University.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrationsix
Acknowledgmentsxi
IntroductionI
To the Sea
Chapter 1.Crossing the Line9
Chapter 2.War and Shipwreck36
Chapter 3.The Riches of Salomon70
To the Manor
Chapter 4.A "Bourgeois Noble"115
Chapter 5."National Vertigo"139
To the Islands
Chapter 6.The Sapelo Bubble169
Chapter 7.Seas of Cotton192
Chapter 8.Ties That Bind220
Chapter 9.Denouement234
Conclusion249
Notes253
Selected Bibliography293
Index299
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