Longhunter, Southern Kentucky Genealogical Kentucky Library - Serials Society Newsletter

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Longhunter, Southern Kentucky Genealogical Kentucky Library - Serials Society Newsletter Western Kentucky University TopSCHOLAR® Longhunter, Southern Kentucky Genealogical Kentucky Library - Serials Society Newsletter Spring 1998 Longhunter, Southern Kentucky Genealogical Society Newsletter Volume 21, Number 2 Kentucky Library Research Collections Western Kentucky University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.wku.edu/longhunter_sokygsn Part of the Genealogy Commons, Public History Commons, and the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Kentucky Library Research Collections, "Longhunter, Southern Kentucky Genealogical Society Newsletter Volume 21, Number 2" (1998). Longhunter, Southern Kentucky Genealogical Society Newsletter. Paper 101. https://digitalcommons.wku.edu/longhunter_sokygsn/101 This Newsletter is brought to you for free and open access by TopSCHOLAR®. It has been accepted for inclusion in Longhunter, Southern Kentucky Genealogical Society Newsletter by an authorized administrator of TopSCHOLAR®. For more information, please contact [email protected]. HUflttR · . ISSN 1067 7348 So~th~l{~twck~ G~~alosical Soci~t\i M~lvin m SOh + ® 19M VOLUME XXI - ISSUE 2 SOUTHERN KENTUCKY GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY P.O. Box 1782 Bowling Green, KY 42102 - 1782 http://members.aol.comlkygen/skgs/skgs.htm 1998 OFFICERS President Mark Lowe Springfield, TN ph. 800-556-4021 Vice President Gail Miller, 425 Midcrest Dr. Bowling Green, KY 4210 I ph. 502-781-1807 Recording Secretary Judy Davenport, 519 Ashmore Bowling Green, KY 42101 ph. 502-842-7353 Corresponding Secretary Betty B. Lyne , 613 E. 11 th Ave. Bowling Green, KY 42101 ph. 502-843-9452 Treasurer Rebecca Lowe Shipley, 702 Eastwood Bowling Green, KY 42103 ph. 502-781-2556 Chaplain Ray Thomas, 2036 Quail Run Dr. Bowling Green, KY 42104 ph. 502-781-8629 Longhunter Editors Sue and Dave Evans, 921 Meadowlark Dr. Bowling Green, Ky 42103 ph. 502-842-2313 MEMBERSHIP Membership in the Southern Kentucky Genealogical Society is open to all persons, especially to those who are interested in research in Allen, Barren, Butler, Edmonson, Logan, Simpson, and Warren Counties in Kentucky. Membership is by the year, I January through 31 December. DUES for individual or family membership are $20.00 per year and include a subscription to the quarterly publication the LONGHUNTER. MEETINGS The SOUTHERN KENTUCKY GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY meets regularly on the third Monday of each month at the Kentucky Advanced Technology Institute (KATI), 1127 Morgantown Rd. , at 6:30 pm. A cordial welcome is extended to all visitors and prospective new members. Announcements of date, time, and place of all meetings will be displayed on the Community Bulletin Board, Channel 6, and in the AROUND TOWN column in the Park City Daily News. THE LONGHUNTER VOLUME XXI ISSUE 2 April, 1998 TABLE OF CONTENTS Longhunter Information.. ..................... .............. .. ....... .. ................. .. ................ ... ... ........... .... 2 The American Revolution ...... ... .... ... .... .... .... ... ......................................... ...... ........ ........... .... .3 Warren County Pensioners ................ ......... .................... ..... .. ......... ... ...... .... ... ... .... ......... ........ 7 Women and the Revolution .. ... ... ......... .. ...................................... ....... ............. .. ... ... .......... ..... 9 Dr. Joseph Warren .................. ........ .. ............... ... .. .... ..... .. .................................................. .. .13 Warren County Kentucky Deed Books. .. ...... .... ..... ............. ............ .. ... ......... ...................... .. 16 Queries ............................................................ ........ ... ................... ..... .............. .. .. .. ...... ....... 22 SKGS Library Donation. .................. ........ ... ..... ... ... ... ..... ...... ................. .... ...... ............... ... ... 23 Old Union Baptist Church Cemetery.. ..... ........... .................................................................. 24 SKGS Meeting Speaker. .. .. ... ... .. ......... .. ............................. .. ....... ... ........ .............................. 32 Owens of Three Forks, Warren County, Kentucky .... .................................... .. .... ...... .. ......... 33 Book Review ... ............... ....... ... ................ ... ... ... ... ... ........ ..................... .......... ... .................. 35 Warren County, Kentucky 1797-1900 Marriages ........... ........... ................. .... ... ............. ....... 36 SKGS Membership ............ ....... ... ....................... .. .... ... ........ .. ......................... ..................... 40 SKGS Donations ............ ... ..... ... ............. ......... ... ................................ ................................. 41 Books and Publications by SKGS .... ... ...................................................... ... ... .. ....... ........... 43 SKGS Treasurer's Report ................................................ .. ................ .................................. 44 Index ......... ... ................. .. .......... ................ ... .... ... ... .. ... ..... .......... ... ....................... ... .... ... ..... 45 Publications ofSKGS Members ............................................................... .. 52 and Back Cover OUT OF TOWN VISITORS When in Bowling Green you might enjoy visiting: I. The Kentucky Library and the Special CoUections in the Kentucky Building, on the campus of Western Kentucky University. 2. The County Court Clerk's office in the Warren County Courthouse. 3. A regular meeting of the SKGS at the Kentucky Advanced Technology Institute at 6:30 PM on the third Monday of each month. THE LONGHUNTER, VOLUME XXI, ISSUE 2, PG. 2 THE LONGHUNTER The LONGHUNTER is published quarterly and is mailed to approximately 180 Southern Kentucky Genealogical Society members and to 100 other societies in exchange for their publications. This quarterly contains 40 to 50 pages each issue and is indexed with a full name index. It is designed to give researchers information about the ancestors and descendants of members of the SKGS and other information from the South Central Kentucky and the North Central Tennessee areas. Members are encouraged to submit articles for publication. Local newspaper clippings from the past, census records, records of court proceedings, Bible and cemetery records, family histories (which you may have written), pedigree charts, and photographs (send copies only), will be welcomed by our editors. Articles written for publication should be typed or printed legibly and should not be over 10 pages in length. Sources for information you submit should be stated in the article or put in footnotes at the end. The right to edit any material for presentation is reserved by the Longhunter editor. Although it is the desire of the Southern Kentucky Genealogical Society to publish reliable genealogical material, neither the Society nor the editors assume responsibility for facts or for opinions expressed by the contributors. Submitted material becomes the property of the LONGHUNTER and will not be returned to the contributor. QUERIES AU members are urged to submit queries. These should be limited to about 80 words per query, but there is no limit to the number of queries a member may submit. Since the LONGHUNTER is read by people throughout the United States, you will be receiving maximum exposure and should be pleased with the results. BACK ISSUES Current and back issues of the LONGHUNTER from 1978 are available, and are $4.00 each, postpaid. Orders should be placed with the Southern Kentucky Genealogical Society, P.O. Box 1782, Bowling Green, KY 42102-1782. BOOK REVIEWS The SOUTHERN KENTUCKY GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY welcomes donated books for review in the LONGHUNTER. After review aU donated books are placed in the Special Collection at the Kentucky Library, Kentucky Building on the campus of Western Kentucky University, in Bowling Green, KY where they are available for aU to use. Please include price and ordering instructions when you send a book in for review. If the person who donates a book is a member of the SKGS, the title and description of the book along with the price and ordering instructions will be placed with other member's books on the inside back cover of the LONGHUNTER. MEMBERSHIP DUES Membership dues in the SOUTHERN KENTUCKY GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY are $20 per calendar year and include a SUbscription to the LONGHUNTER quarterly publication. Your check should be sent to SOUTHERN KENTUCKY GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY, P.O. BOX 1782, BOWLING GREEN, KY 42102-1782. THE LONGH UN TER, VOLUME XXI, ISSUE 2, PG 3 THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION Sue Evans 92 1 Meadowlark Drive Bowling Green, Kentucky 421 03 When Congress adopted the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776 Kentucky was still a part of the state of Virginia. Thus, Kentucky did not participate in the war as a state, however, the American Revolutionary War had a major impact on the early settlement and statehood of Kentucky. According to one source (Quisenberry, Revolutionary Soldiers in Kentucky) Kentucky has, in proportion to population more descendants of Revolutionary soldiers than any other state. Most of the original male settlers had seen service in the Revolutionary war. This was especially true of those who carne from Virginia as they were granted land in Kentucky in reward for their military service. These men were also the ones who served in leadership roles as the state
Recommended publications
  • Lesser Feasts and Fasts 2018
    Lesser Feasts and Fasts 2018 Conforming to General Convention 2018 1 Preface Christians have since ancient times honored men and women whose lives represent heroic commitment to Christ and who have borne witness to their faith even at the cost of their lives. Such witnesses, by the grace of God, live in every age. The criteria used in the selection of those to be commemorated in the Episcopal Church are set out below and represent a growing consensus among provinces of the Anglican Communion also engaged in enriching their calendars. What we celebrate in the lives of the saints is the presence of Christ expressing itself in and through particular lives lived in the midst of specific historical circumstances. In the saints we are not dealing primarily with absolutes of perfection but human lives, in all their diversity, open to the motions of the Holy Spirit. Many a holy life, when carefully examined, will reveal flaws or the bias of a particular moment in history or ecclesial perspective. It should encourage us to realize that the saints, like us, are first and foremost redeemed sinners in whom the risen Christ’s words to St. Paul come to fulfillment, “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.” The “lesser feasts” provide opportunities for optional observance. They are not intended to replace the fundamental celebration of Sunday and major Holy Days. As the Standing Liturgical Commission and the General Convention add or delete names from the calendar, successive editions of this volume will be published, each edition bearing in the title the date of the General Convention to which it is a response.
    [Show full text]
  • Cornell Alumni News Volume 49, Number 7 November 15, 1946 Price 20 Cents
    Cornell Alumni News Volume 49, Number 7 November 15, 1946 Price 20 Cents Dawson Catches a Pass from Burns in Yale Game on Schoellkopf Field "It is not the finding of a thing, but the making something out of it after it is found, that is of consequence ' —JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL Why some things get better all the time TAKE THE MODERN ELECTRIC LIGHT BULB, for ex- Producing better materials for the use of industry ample. Its parts were born in heat as high as 6,000° F. and the benefit of mankind is the work of Union ... in cold as low as 300° below zero . under crush- Carbide. ing pressure as great as 3,000 pounds per square inch. Basic knowledge and persistent research are re- Only in these extremes of heat, cold and pressure quired, particularly in the fields of science and en- did nature yield the metal tungsten for the shining gineering. Working with extremes of heat and cold, filament. argon, the colorless gas that fills the bulb and with vacuums and great pressures, Units of UCC . and the plastic that permanently seals the glass now separate or combine nearly one-half of the many to the metal stem. And it is because elements of the earth. of such materials that light bulbs today are better than ever before. The steady improvement of the TTNION CARBIDE V-/ AND CARBON CORPORATION electric light bulb is another in- stance of history repeating itself. For man has always Products of Divisions and Units include— had to have better materials before he could make ALLOYS AND METALS CHEMICALS PLASTICS ELECTRODES, CARBONS, AND BATTERIES better things.
    [Show full text]
  • Study Guide for the Georgia History Exemption Exam Below Are 99 Entries in the New Georgia Encyclopedia (Available At
    Study guide for the Georgia History exemption exam Below are 99 entries in the New Georgia Encyclopedia (available at www.georgiaencyclopedia.org. Students who become familiar with these entries should be able to pass the Georgia history exam: 1. Georgia History: Overview 2. Mississippian Period: Overview 3. Hernando de Soto in Georgia 4. Spanish Missions 5. James Oglethorpe (1696-1785) 6. Yamacraw Indians 7. Malcontents 8. Tomochichi (ca. 1644-1739) 9. Royal Georgia, 1752-1776 10. Battle of Bloody Marsh 11. James Wright (1716-1785) 12. Salzburgers 13. Rice 14. Revolutionary War in Georgia 15. Button Gwinnett (1735-1777) 16. Lachlan McIntosh (1727-1806) 17. Mary Musgrove (ca. 1700-ca. 1763) 18. Yazoo Land Fraud 19. Major Ridge (ca. 1771-1839) 20. Eli Whitney in Georgia 21. Nancy Hart (ca. 1735-1830) 22. Slavery in Revolutionary Georgia 23. War of 1812 and Georgia 24. Cherokee Removal 25. Gold Rush 26. Cotton 27. William Harris Crawford (1772-1834) 28. John Ross (1790-1866) 29. Wilson Lumpkin (1783-1870) 30. Sequoyah (ca. 1770-ca. 1840) 31. Howell Cobb (1815-1868) 32. Robert Toombs (1810-1885) 33. Alexander Stephens (1812-1883) 34. Crawford Long (1815-1878) 35. William and Ellen Craft (1824-1900; 1826-1891) 36. Mark Anthony Cooper (1800-1885) 37. Roswell King (1765-1844) 38. Land Lottery System 39. Cherokee Removal 40. Worcester v. Georgia (1832) 41. Georgia in 1860 42. Georgia and the Sectional Crisis 43. Battle of Kennesaw Mountain 44. Sherman's March to the Sea 45. Deportation of Roswell Mill Women 46. Atlanta Campaign 47. Unionists 48. Joseph E.
    [Show full text]
  • 2016 Annual Report  3 4  Delaware State Police 2016 Annual Report  5 6  Delaware State Police Executive Staff
    The 2016 Delaware State Police Annual Report is dedicated to the members of the Delaware State Police who have made the ultimate sacrifice while protecting the citizens and visitors of the State of Delaware. Patrolman Francis Ryan Sergeant Thomas H. Lamb Trooper Paul H. Sherman Corporal Leroy L. Lekites Corporal James D. Orvis Corporal Raymond B. Wilhelm Trooper William F. Mayer Trooper First Class Harold B. Rupert Trooper Robert A. Paris Colonel Eugene B. Ellis Trooper William C. Keller Trooper Ronald L. Carey Trooper David C. Yarrington Trooper George W. Emory Lieutenant William I. Jearman Corporal David B. Pulling Trooper Kevin J. Mallon Trooper Gerard T. Dowd Corporal Robert H. Bell Corporal Francis T. Schneible Trooper Sandra M. Wagner Corporal Frances M. Collender Corporal Christopher M. Shea 2 Delaware State Police Mission Statement To enhance the quality of life for all Delaware citizens and visitors by providing professional, competent and compassionate law enforcement services. HONOR INTEGRITY COURAGE LOYALTY ATTITUDE DISCIPLINE SERVICE Photo by: Elisa Vassas 2016 Annual Report 3 4 Delaware State Police 2016 Annual Report 5 6 Delaware State Police Executive Staff Colonel Nathaniel McQueen Lt. Colonel Monroe Hudson Superintendent Deputy Superintendent Major Robert Hudson Major Daniel Meadows Administrative Officer Special Operations Officer Major Galen Purcell Major Melissa Zebley South Operations Officer North Operations Officer 2016 Annual Report 7 Table of Contents Mission Statement ..............Page 3 Office
    [Show full text]
  • America the Beautiful Part 1
    America the Beautiful Part 1 Charlene Notgrass 1 America the Beautiful Part 1 by Charlene Notgrass ISBN 978-1-60999-141-8 Copyright © 2020 Notgrass Company. All rights reserved. All product names, brands, and other trademarks mentioned or pictured in this book are used for educational purposes only. No association with or endorsement by the owners of the trademarks is intended. Each trademark remains the property of its respective owner. Unless otherwise noted, scripture quotations are taken from the New American Standard Bible®, Copyright © 1960, 1962, 1963, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1995 by the Lockman Foundation. All rights reserved. Used by permission. Cover Images: Jordan Pond, Maine, background by Dave Ashworth / Shutterstock.com; Deer’s Hair by George Catlin / Smithsonian American Art Museum; Young Girl and Dog by Percy Moran / Smithsonian American Art Museum; William Lee from George Washington and William Lee by John Trumbull / Metropolitan Museum of Art. Back Cover Author Photo: Professional Portraits by Kevin Wimpy The image on the preceding page is of Denali in Denali National Park. No part of this material may be reproduced without permission from the publisher. You may not photocopy this book. If you need additional copies for children in your family or for students in your group or classroom, contact Notgrass History to order them. Printed in the United States of America. Notgrass History 975 Roaring River Rd. Gainesboro, TN 38562 1-800-211-8793 notgrass.com Thunder Rocks, Allegany State Park, New York Dear Student When God created the land we call America, He sculpted and painted a masterpiece.
    [Show full text]
  • PUBLIC NOTICE CONVERSE COUNTY, WYOMING in Accordance with W.S
    PUBLIC NOTICE CONVERSE COUNTY, WYOMING In accordance with W.S. 18-3-516, the following is a complete listing of all fulltime employees and elected officials of Converse County. Salaries are gross yearly salaries and do not reflect any fringe benefits or overtime compensation: Alvarado, Adam, Detention LT $68,394.06; Alvarado, Daniel, Patrol Deputy $56,225.32; Ayers, Earl, Operator $49,295.98; Becker, Clinton, Sheriff $97,600; Blomberg, Kelli, Attorney $104,999.95; Boespflug, Alex, PS Telecommunicator $43,596.80; Bowen, James, Operator $51,792; Brammer, Jeffery Detention Officer $45,186; Bright, Robin Detention SGT $63,181.02; Carr, Frances, Clerk $41,529.60; Carr, Geri, Clerk $55,654.07; Carr, Patricia, Clerk $45,580.63; Caskey, Christopher, Tech Svc. Dir. $86,000; Cathcart, Carly, PS Telecommunicator $41,600.04; Chamberlain, Joel, Operator $39,991.64; Colling, Michael, Commissioner $37,800; Cooper, Vere, Comm Supervisor $64,000; Dalgarn, Russel, Emergency Mgr. $71,426.75; Davies, Mike Operator $46,337.09; Davis, Robert, Operator $38,480; Dexter, Mark, Patrol Deputy $66,809.59; Doyle, Sara, PS Telecommuter $37,502.40; Dwyer, Corey, Patrol Deputy $59,666.75; Dyess, Courtney, Receptionist $33,600.04; Eller, Michael, Operator $48,831.59;Florence, David, Detention Officer $52,945; Gabert, Harley, Operator $41,019.24; Gallagher, Jamie, Detention Officer $50,142.08; Grant, Richard Jr, Commissioner $37,800; Gregersen, Stephen, Attorney $103,492.44; Guenther, Kenneth, Operator $38,480; Gushurst, Don, Maint. Dir. $57,623.71; Gilliam, Whitney, PS Telecommunicator $37,502.40; Harris, Barbara, Deputy Dist. Court Clerk $61,509.55; Herrera, Paul, Mechanic $58,559.07; Hinckley, Jim, Operator $57,883.07; Hinckley, Katy, Detention Officer $44,300; Hinckley, Thomas, Operator $38,480; Hinton, Christopher, Dep.
    [Show full text]
  • Stepping out of Her Place: a New Look at Women's Roles During Selected Wars in U.S. History
    Louisiana State University LSU Digital Commons LSU Master's Theses Graduate School 2004 Stepping out of her place: a new look at women's roles during selected wars in U.S. history Nicole Lynn Bowen Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_theses Part of the Education Commons Recommended Citation Bowen, Nicole Lynn, "Stepping out of her place: a new look at women's roles during selected wars in U.S. history" (2004). LSU Master's Theses. 526. https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_theses/526 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at LSU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in LSU Master's Theses by an authorized graduate school editor of LSU Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. STEPPING OUT OF HER PLACE: A NEW LOOK AT WOMEN’S ROLES DURING SELECTED WARS IN U.S. HISTORY A Thesis Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of the Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in The Department of Curriculum and Instruction by Nicole Lynn Bowen B.A., Birmingham-Southern College, 2002 May 2004 I dedicate this work to my loving husband, Christopher, and my parents James and Rose Jordan. Thank you Chris for being by my side every step of the way, being my partner and my friend, encouraging me, and never letting me lose faith. Thank you Mom and Dad for always believing in me, being a constant and steady source of support throughout my education, and making me believe that I can do anything I put my mind to.
    [Show full text]
  • SUNSET INTERNATIONAL BIBLE INSTITUTE • FALL 2015 the LORD Gave, and the LORD Has Taken Away; Blessed Be the Name of the LORD
    SUNSET INTERNATIONAL BIBLE INSTITUTE • FALL 2015 The LORD gave, and the LORD has taken away; blessed be the name of the LORD. - Job 1:21 he year 2015 will long be remembered in the annals of SIBI as a year of Tphenomenal gains, huge losses and blessings from God too numerous to count. Among the losses, if they can be called that, are the 2,000 more solar players. Perhaps most significant is our many faculty, alumni, missionaries, and significant donors first “foreign language” version of the solar player as 500 and partners in ministry who passed from this life to their are being prepared for Ethiopia in the Amharic language. eternal reward this year. Notable among those listed are We will soon be releasing a huge announcement about the Gerald Paden, Jo Iris Paden, Alex Strachan, Harvie Pruitt, Spanish language version which will be unveiled in 2016 Mike Dawidow, A.D. Smith, Reta Clark and Marguerite and the nations that will be included in that distribution. Gray, all of whom served in significant roles in various We will be asking for brotherhood involvement and SIBI programs. Added to that, we lost a larger than usual partnership in that exciting venture. number of alumni who were out faithfully preaching and Speaking of innovative technology, a brand new teaching God’s word. When a school is more than half e-Sword Bible program module will be released this month a century old, it may be expected that earlier graduates featuring the Sunset commentary series. A generous and faculty will begin to “go home” at a faster rate.
    [Show full text]
  • From a Confederate Valentine to the Nancy Harts Kelleher’S Stamp Collector’S Quarterly • First Quarter 2018 • 47 SCQ by Patricia A
    From a Confederate Valentine to the Nancy Harts Kelleher’s Stamp Collector’s Quarterly • First Quarter 2018 • 47 SCQ By Patricia A. Kaufmann alentines that truly match their conveying covers are quite scarce in Confederate postal history collections. One such as that shown in Figure 1 are treasured. Many offered “Confederate Valentines” are questionable or, at the least, not readily verifiable. The subject cover and homemade valentine on the previous page (which was, in effect, a handwritten letter with pressed and dried flowers) represent a use on the first Valentine’s Day of the newly formed Confederacy, but before the first shots of the warVV were fired. The cover is a 3¢ Star-Die entire (Scott US #U-26), manuscript canceled and postmarked from West Point, Ga., 15 February [1861]. This represents Confederate use of U.S. postage, defined as the period from when a state joined the Confederacy until the Confederate States of America Post Office Department (CSAPOD) took over its own affairs from the United States on June 1, 1861. 48 • Kelleher’s Stamp Collector’s Quarterly • First Quarter 2018 “From the nebulous “facts,” you can deduce that such research is challenging at best. One laughable source shows the date of Blanche’s birth as about 1844 and the date of her death as about 1887...Although it shows as her dying about 1887 it also shows her residence in Houston in 1910...” Georgia seceded on January 19, 1861, and was an inde- All the girls of my class are busy sending love missives. I pendent state for 16 days before it joined the Confederacy on yet know nothing of Cupid or his missives, and to keep pace February 4, 1861, as one of the first six states.
    [Show full text]
  • "A Call to Honor" : Rebecca Latimer Felton and White Supremacy Open PDF in Browser
    33% 4|HH||W|HHHI“WUIN}WWWMHWIlHIHI ‘l'HESIS ;,L llllllllllillllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllUllllllllllllllllll 200. O 3129 02 07415 LtfiRARY Michigan State University This is to certify that the thesis entitled "A CALL 'm m" : 113:3th TATIMER Harmon AND WHITE SUPREMACY presented by MARY A. HESS has been accepted towards fulfillment of the requirements for __M.A._.degree in m Major professor Date __Janna.r§z_1,_1_999_ 0-7639 MS U is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Institution PLACE IN RETURN Box to remove this checkout from your record. I To AVOID PINS return on or before date due. MAY BE RECAU£D with earlier due date if requested. DATE DUE DATE DUE _ DATE DUE moo WWW“ "A CALL TO HONOR": REBECCA LATIMER FELTON AND WHITE SUPREMACY BY Mary A. Hess A THESIS Submitted to Michigan State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of MASTER OF ARTS Department of History 1999 ABSTRACT "A CALL TO HONOR": REBECCA LATIMER FELTON AND WHITE SUPREMACY BY Mary A. Hess Rebecca Latimer Felton, suffragist and reformer, was a fervent advocate of white supremacy and a believer in the use of lynching as social control. Her status as an elite white woman of the New South, the wife of a Georgia politician who served two terms in the U.S.Congress, as well as the protege of Populist leader Tom Watson, allowed her unusual access to public platforms and the press. Felton, a woman of extraordinary abilities, relished her power in Georgia politics and remained a force until her death. She was appointed as interim U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • The Place To
    The FORPlace SHOPPING, DINING,to Be… ENTERTAINMENT AND We Say, EVENTS! VISITORS GUIDE Welcome Back. Experience the variety of old and new as they blend together in beautiful Middle Tennessee, just minutes from Nashville. Discover our history. Explore our country music heritage. Hear our legends and SHOP stories. Soak in the simplicity of our lake, parks and farms. After a few adventures in our county, you'll feel like you are returning home. ON THE COVER Gallatin’s annual Main Street Festival has become a VISITORS GUIDE destination the first Saturday in October. It has grown in size to over 200 vendors and 25,000 visitors! There DINE is live music throughout the day, a large children’s area and a variety of food vendors. Restaurants and shops around the historic downtown square are also VisitSumnerTN.com • #VisitSumnerTN open during the festival. We hope you will join us for the 2018 Main Street Festival on Saturday, October 6! LOCATION ENTERTAIN Sumner County is located between Nashville and the Kentucky State line with quick access to I-65 and I-40. Just minutes from downtown Nashville. SUMNER COUNTY CONVENTION & VISITORS BUREAU SUMNER COUNTY TOURISM KENTUCKY 23102310 Nashville Nashville Pike Pike • • Gallatin, Gallatin, TN TN 37066 37066 888•301•7886888•301•7886 • • 615•230•8474 615•230•8474 • • Fax Fax 615•230•9963 615•230•9963 KY #VisitSumnerTN • VisitSumnerTN.com SUMNER #VisitSumnerTN • VisitSumnerTN.com SUMNER COUNTY COUNTYKNOXVILL E LLE TN NAS65HVI 24 NC 300 Indian Lake Boulevard Hendersonville, TN 37075 Vietnam Veterans & Indian Lake Boulevard MEMPHIS GA SC AL WWW.STREETSOFINDIANLAKE.COM ATLANTA MNASHVILLES 40 VisitSumnerTN.com • #VisitSumnerTN visitsumnertn.com 1 2018 Special events MUSIC, FOOD AND MORE! NASHVILLE SYMPHONY AT ROCK CASTLE GALLATIN SHAMROCK RUN / After the Shamrock Run, we hope you will attend our first County Sumner COUNTY SUMNER IRISH FESTIVAL (NEW) Irish Festival, Saturday March 10, 2018 from 10:00am to 2:00pm at Saturday, March 10, 2018 Bledsoe’s Fort Historical Park in Castalian Springs.
    [Show full text]
  • Lycra, Legs, and Legitimacy: Performances of Feminine Power in Twentieth Century American Popular Culture
    LYCRA, LEGS, AND LEGITIMACY: PERFORMANCES OF FEMININE POWER IN TWENTIETH CENTURY AMERICAN POPULAR CULTURE Quincy Thomas A Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate College of Bowling Green State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY May 2018 Committee: Jonathan Chambers, Advisor Francisco Cabanillas, Graduate Faculty Representative Bradford Clark Lesa Lockford © 2018 Quincy Thomas All Rights Reserved iii ABSTRACT Jonathan Chambers, Advisor As a child, when I consumed fictional narratives that centered on strong female characters, all I noticed was the enviable power that they exhibited. From my point of view, every performance by a powerful character like Wonder Woman, Daisy Duke, or Princess Leia, served to highlight her drive, ability, and intellect in a wholly uncomplicated way. What I did not notice then was the often-problematic performances of female power that accompanied those narratives. As a performance studies and theatre scholar, with a decades’ old love of all things popular culture, I began to ponder the troubling question: Why are there so many popular narratives focused on female characters who are, on a surface level, portrayed as bastions of strength, that fall woefully short of being true representations of empowerment when subjected to close analysis? In an endeavor to answer this question, in this dissertation I examine what I contend are some of the paradoxical performances of female heroism, womanhood, and feminine aggression from the 1960s to the 1990s. To facilitate this investigation, I engage in close readings of several key aesthetic and cultural texts from these decades. While the Wonder Woman comic book universe serves as the centerpiece of this study, I also consider troublesome performances and representations of female power in the television shows Bewitched, I Dream of Jeannie, and Buffy the Vampire Slayer, the film Grease, the stage musical Les Misérables, and the video game Tomb Raider.
    [Show full text]