Generations of readers have marveled at the bravery of man who could paddle a canoe amid thrashing alligators, find beauty in the humblest of plants, and sketch them both.".
The King's Ranger explores not only military history but also such aspects of the American past as colonial migration, upheaval in the backcountry... and the formation of new settlements in...
Cashin discusses the aims and ambitions of the frontier's many interest groups, profiles the figures who catalyzed the power struggles, and explains events from the vantage points of traders and Native Americans.
Edward J. Cashin, the preeminent historian of colonial Georgia history, offers an account of the Lower Chickasaws, who settled on the Savannah River near Augusta in the early eighteenth century and remained an integral part of the region ...
A Wilderness Still the Cradle of Nature: Frontier Georgia : a Documentary History
Setting Out to Begin a New World: Colonial Georgia
... 114 Sheftall, Benjamin, 67 Sheftall, Levi, 132 Sheftall, Mordecai, 127, 132, 157 Sims, Luke, 266 Sipple, Sallylu, ... 233 Sparkman, Rhea, 245 SS George Whitefield, 221 SS James Habersham, 221 Stephens, Thomas, 49, 50 Stephens, ...
This work offers a look at the life of this larger-than-life Confederate soldier.
More than an artful biography, this is the story of a crucial period in American and British history, as told through the experiences of one of the period's most influential, behind-the-scenes power brokers.
Old Springfield: Race and Religion in Augusta, Georgia
“Some Hints and Observations,” quoted in Cashin, William Bartram and the American Revolution on the Southern Frontier, 4, 248. . Bartram's antislavery tract (which also remained in manuscript) dates from the same period.