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A rogue's paradise : crime and punishment in Antebellum Florida, 1821-1861 / James M. Denham.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Tuscaloosa, Ala. : University of Alabama Press, �1997.Description: 1 online resource (xii, 385 pages) : illustrations, mapsContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 0585215421
  • 9780585215426
  • 9780817308476
  • 0817308474
  • 0817352368
  • 9780817352363
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Rogue's paradise.DDC classification:
  • 364.9759/09/034 20
LOC classification:
  • HV6793.F6 D46 1997eb
Online resources:
Contents:
Crime, the Law, and Society -- Crime and Its Causes -- Courts, Judges, and Law Enforcement Officers -- Receptacles of Crime: Florida's Judicial Circuits -- Crime against Person -- Violating the Domestic Sphere: Women, Violence, and Crime -- Crime against Property -- Crime against Public Order and Morality -- Blacks, Crime, and the Law -- Florida's Antebellum Lawmen -- Catching Criminals on the Antebellum Frontier -- Jails and Escapes -- Outlaw Gangs, Lynch Mobs, and Regulators: Policing the Antebellum Frontier -- Our Violent Past: A Heritage of Honor and Frontier -- Legal and Extralegal Executions -- County Seats and Superior/Circuit Courts -- Law and Judicial Officers -- Prosecution Tables by County.
Summary: The pervasive influence of the frontier is fundamental to an understanding of antebellum Florida. James M. Denham traces the growth and social development of this sparsely settled region through its experience with crime and punishment.Summary: Using court records, government documents, newspapers, and personal papers, Denham explores how crime affected ordinary Floridians - whites and blacks, perpetrators, victims, and enforcers. He contends that although the frontier determined the enforcement and administration of the law, the ethic of honor dominated human relationships. Although indictments for crimes against persons were far more frequent than those for crimes against property, the punishment for the latter was more severe (except for murder) because such crimes violated the South's cherished code of honor. A sparse, rural agricultural population valued a personal integrity that included a strong sense of economic morality. Honesty and truthfulness were traits not only desired but demanded. Stealing was a violation of that trust and received society's sternest punishment.
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Includes bibliographical references (pages 339-369) and index.

Crime, the Law, and Society -- Crime and Its Causes -- Courts, Judges, and Law Enforcement Officers -- Receptacles of Crime: Florida's Judicial Circuits -- Crime against Person -- Violating the Domestic Sphere: Women, Violence, and Crime -- Crime against Property -- Crime against Public Order and Morality -- Blacks, Crime, and the Law -- Florida's Antebellum Lawmen -- Catching Criminals on the Antebellum Frontier -- Jails and Escapes -- Outlaw Gangs, Lynch Mobs, and Regulators: Policing the Antebellum Frontier -- Our Violent Past: A Heritage of Honor and Frontier -- Legal and Extralegal Executions -- County Seats and Superior/Circuit Courts -- Law and Judicial Officers -- Prosecution Tables by County.

Print version record.

The pervasive influence of the frontier is fundamental to an understanding of antebellum Florida. James M. Denham traces the growth and social development of this sparsely settled region through its experience with crime and punishment.

Using court records, government documents, newspapers, and personal papers, Denham explores how crime affected ordinary Floridians - whites and blacks, perpetrators, victims, and enforcers. He contends that although the frontier determined the enforcement and administration of the law, the ethic of honor dominated human relationships. Although indictments for crimes against persons were far more frequent than those for crimes against property, the punishment for the latter was more severe (except for murder) because such crimes violated the South's cherished code of honor. A sparse, rural agricultural population valued a personal integrity that included a strong sense of economic morality. Honesty and truthfulness were traits not only desired but demanded. Stealing was a violation of that trust and received society's sternest punishment.

English.

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