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Eliza Lucas Pinckney. By Christian Pennokee. Eliza Lucas Pinckney. Born in Antigua in 1722 Oldest of 4 children. Eliza Lucas Pinckney. Went to finishing school in London Studied French, music and botany Botany was her favorite subject. Eliza Lucas Pinckney.
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Eliza Lucas Pinckney • By Christian Pennokee
Eliza Lucas Pinckney • Born in Antigua in 1722 • Oldest of 4 children
Eliza Lucas Pinckney • Went to finishing school in London • Studied French, music and botany • Botany was her favorite subject
Eliza Lucas Pinckney • Moved to Charleston, South Carolina in 1738 after her father inherited 3 rice plantations and her mother got sick.
Eliza Lucas Pinckney • Eliza’s mother died and she was left to take care of her brothers and sister. • When Eliza was 16 she had to take care of 3 plantations because her father had to go back to the West Indies.
Eliza Lucas Pinckney • She experimented with different cash crops then her father sent her indigo seeds. She tried and tried to grow them but they kept dying in the Winter. She shared the seeds with other planters and they finally had a successful crop.
Eliza Lucas Pinckney • Indigo is a seed that produces blue dye that was in great demand in European textile industries. • Within 2 years indigo became South Carolina’s best cash crop beside rice.
Eliza Lucas Pinckney • Eliza was responsible for caring for the slaves that worked on the plantations. She taught them to read and write.
Eliza Lucas Pinckney • Married at age 22 to Charles Pinckney who owned a plantation next to hers • They had 4 children whom Eliza educated • Eliza’s husband died in 1758.
Eliza Lucas Pinckney • Eliza’s sons, Thomas and Charles were both American generals during the Revolutionary War. • Charles was a signer of the U.S. Constitution. • Thomas was a minister of Spain and Great Britain.
Eliza Lucas Pinckney • Eliza continued to run the Pinckney’s plantations until she died in 1793. • George Washington served as one of her pallbearers. • Eliza was the first woman inducted into the South Carolina Business Hall of Fame in 1989.
Bibliography Contributed by Danuta Bois, 1998. 1. American Women’s History by Doris Weatherford, Prentice Hall General Reference, 1994 2. Susan B. Anthony Slept Here. A Guide to American Women’s Landmarks by Lynn Sherr and Jurate Kazickas, Random House, 1994 3. Larousse Dictionary Of Women, edited by Melanie Parry, Larousse, 1996 4. Microsoft Encarta 98 Encyclopedia 5. “Eliza Lucas Pinckney,” Distinguished Women of the Past and Present 1998, by Danuta Bois 6. Milestones: A Chronology of American Women’s History “Eliza Lucas Pinckney,” by Doris Weatherford Enterprising Women Exhibit, n.d. 7. “Eliza Lucas Pinckney,” Info Please, n.d. 8. Houghton Mifflin Social Studies United States History: Early Years 9. Founding Mothers by Cokie Roberts, Harper Collins Publishers, Inc. 2004 10.Young & Brave: Girls Changing History by Doris Weatherford, National Women’s History Museum
References • www.nwhm.org/youngandbrave/pinckney.jpg • www.greenwichmeantime.com/time-zone/usa/south-carolina/map.html • http://www.richardseaman.com/Travel/UK/London/Highlights/DigitalTowerOfLondon.jpg • www.historiclandscape.org/Pinckney.html • www.personal.psu.edu/.../ElizaLucazPinckney.jpg • http://sciway3.net/proctor/state/sc_rice.html • www.flickr.com/photos/pcoin/249141508/ • www.halo-glaz.com/colors/indigo-blue.html • www.fashionjeans.asia/indigo-3.html • www.flickr.com/photos/madamemckay/3812041164/ • http://entwinements.com/blog-mt3/indigo%20rosettes%28sm%29.jpg • docsouth.unc.edu/nc/king/ill284.html • www.flickr.com/photos/etacar11/2976058305/