The Official History of Laurens County, Georgia, 1807-1941
Author: Bertha Sheppard Hart
Publisher:
Published: 1978-01-01
Total Pages: 546
ISBN-13: 9780877970422
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Author: Bertha Sheppard Hart
Publisher:
Published: 1978-01-01
Total Pages: 546
ISBN-13: 9780877970422
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Bertha Sheppard Hart
Publisher:
Published: 1941
Total Pages: 622
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Bertha Sheppard Hart
Publisher: Agee Pub
Published: 1988-12-01
Total Pages: 992
ISBN-13: 9780935265132
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Victor Davidson
Publisher: Genealogical Publishing Com
Published: 2009-06
Total Pages: 661
ISBN-13: 0806346817
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThis consolidated reprint of three pamphlets by Mr. David Dobson endeavors to shed light on some 1,000 Irish men and women and their families who emigrated to North America between roughly 1775 and 1825. In the majority of cases, the lists provides us with most of the following particulars: name, date of birth, name of ship, occupation in Ireland, reason for emigration, sometimes place of origin in Ireland, place of disembarkation in the New World, date of arrival, number of persons in the household, and the source of the information. This volume is the first in a three-volume series by Mr. Dobson on early Irish emigration to America.
Author: Ella Mitchell
Publisher:
Published: 1924
Total Pages: 182
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Mixon, Gregory
Publisher: University Press of Florida
Published: 2016-07-25
Total Pages: 441
ISBN-13: 0813055873
DOWNLOAD EBOOKIn Show Thyself a Man, Gregory Mixon explores the ways African Americans in postbellum Georgia used the militia as a vehicle to secure full citizenship, respect, and a more stable place in society. As citizen-soldiers, black men were empowered to get involved in politics, secure their own financial independence, and publicly commemorate black freedom with celebrations such as Emancipation Day. White Georgians, however, used the militia as a different symbol of freedom--to ensure the postwar white right to rule. This book is a forty-year history of black militia service in Georgia and the determined disbandment process that whites undertook to destroy it, connecting this chapter of the post-emancipation South to the larger history of militia participation by African-descendant people through the Western hemisphere and Latin America.
Author:
Publisher: Genealogical Publishing Company
Published: 2014-02
Total Pages: 0
ISBN-13: 9780806319902
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThe 1864 Census for Re-organizing the Georgia Militia is a statewide census of all white males between the ages of 16 and 60 who were not at the time in the service of the Confederate States of America. Based on a law passed by the Georgia Legislature in December 1863 to provide for the protection of women, children, and invalids living at home, it is a list of some 42,000 men--many of them exempt from service--who were able to serve in local militia companies and perform such homefront duties as might be required of them. In accordance with the law, enrollment lists were drawn up by counties and within counties by militia districts. Each one of the 42,000 persons enrolled was listed by his full name, age, occupation, place of birth, and reason (if any) for his exemption from service. Sometime between 1920 and 1940 the Georgia Pension and Record Department typed up copies of these lists. Names on the typed lists, unlike most of the originals, are in alphabetical order, and it is these typed lists which form the basis of this new work by Mrs. Nancy Cornell. Checking the typed lists against the original handwritten records on microfilm in the Georgia Department of Archives & History, Mrs. Cornell was able to add some information and correct certain misspellings. She also points out that no lists were found for the counties of Burke, Catoosa, Chattooga, Dade, Dooly, Emanuel, Irwin, Johnson, Pulaski, and Wilcox.
Author: Mark V. Wetherington
Publisher: Univ. of Tennessee Press
Published: 2002-05
Total Pages: 420
ISBN-13: 9781572331686
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThis examination of cultural change challenges the conventional view of the Georgia Pine Belt as an unchanging economic backwater. Its postbellum economy evolves from self-sufficiency to being largely dependent upon cotton. Before the Civil War, the Piney Woods easily supported a population of mostly yeomen farmers and livestock herders. After the war, a variety of external forces, spearheaded by Reconstruction-era New South boosters, invaded the region, permanently altering the social, political, and economic landscape in an attempt to create a South with a diversified economy. The first stage in the transformation -- railroad construction and a revival of steamboating -- led to the second stage: sawmilling and turpentining. The harvest of forest products during the 1870s and 1880s created new economic opportunities but left the area dependent upon a single industry that brought deforestation and the decline of the open-range system within a generation.
Author: Wilber W. Caldwell
Publisher: Mercer University Press
Published: 2001
Total Pages: 634
ISBN-13: 9780865547483
DOWNLOAD EBOOKTheir songs insist that the arrival of the railroad and the appearance of the tiny depot often created such hope that it inspired the construction of the architectural extravaganzas that were the courthouses of the era. In these buildings the distorted myth of the Old South collided head-on with the equally deformed myth of the New South."
Author: Lucian Lamar Knight
Publisher:
Published: 1917
Total Pages: 672
ISBN-13:
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