CHATHAM COUNTY, GEORGIA
NEW 121 Page Illustrated Booklet
Early days in Chatham
County, GA, which encompasses the city of Savannah, are recalled
through a mixture of colorful tales and factual data in this reprinted
from two rare books: the Rev. George White's Historical
Collections of Georgia and Georgia,
a Guide to Its Towns and Countryside, a WPA publication.
The spiral-bound booklet is printed one-sided on 60# paper with the
print enlarged for easier reading. A vinyl sheet has been added to protect
the cover.
Besides Savannah,
places mentioned include: Thunderbolt, Beaulieu, Bonaventure,
Brewton's Hill, Gibbons' Plantation, and Cherokee Hill, Jasper, Sprint,
Fort Jackson, .
The excerpt from White's book covers
the development of this area until the publication date of 1854,
while excerpts from the WPA book, give a nostalgic glimpse from
mid-20th Century vantage point, including interesting historical
notes, especially as they relate to sightseeing possibilities.
Among
the many and diverse topics in section from White's book are: Extract
from 1850 Census; Physical features; Public Buildings; the
Female Asylum and its officers; Description of Engineering for new
Savanah Water-Works; the Custom House; Count Pulaski
who died at the Siege of Savannah; Artist Launitz's description
of the Pulaski Monument and list of items deposited in cornerstone
; Hotels; Various early Churches; Early Settlement under Oglethorpe,
his dealings with the Indians, and various other information pertaining
thereto; Whitefield's Orphan House and a List of some of the
children; Fort Pulaski on Cockspur Island; Sgt. Jasper and
other heros of the 2nd Regiment in the Revolutionary War; Savannah
captured by the English in 1779; the Capture of Mordecai Sheftall
of the Continental Troops in 1778; English Account of the Attack
and Repulse at Savannah; List of American officers killed; Letters
between Count D'Estaing and General Prevost, pertaining to the Surrender
of Savannah, Detailed Account of the Tragic Loss of the Steamer
Pulaski in 1838 ; Extraorinary Capture of an English command by
Colonel White and a handful of Americans near Savannah; Distinguished Men
-- Rev. J.J. Zubly, Colonel Francis Harris, Jonathan Bryan,
David Montaigut, Major John Habersham, Major John Barnard, Anthony
Stokes, William Stephens, James Jones, Noble Wymberley Jones, Colonel
John White, Joseph Habersham, the Rev. Henry Kollock, the Rev.
Henry Holcombe, the Rev. Edward Neufville, Senator John MacPherson
Berrien (detail on his public life and debate on the Fugitive Slave
Law), Supreme Court Judge James Moore Wayne, the Rev. Stephen Elliott
Jr.; and other interesting bits of history and trivia.
The WPA section
discusses Savannah architecture, Education, Dr.
William Houstoun, the Ogeechee Canal, Savanna in the War
Between the States; Commercial growth after World Wars I and II;
and much more. There's a small 1950s map of Augusta and information
on points of interest including Bull Street (City Hall, Johnson
Square, United States Customhouse, Christ Episcopal Church, Wright
Square, the Tomochichi Marker, Lutheran Church of the Ascension,
the W.W. Gordon House, Independent Presbyterian Church, Chippewa
Square, the Barrow House, Madison Square, the Meldrim House, St.
John's Episcopal Church, Monterey Square, the Henry Jackson House,
Armstrong College, Warren G. Candler Memorial Hospital, Forsyth
Park, Chatham Artillery Barracks, and Savannah Public Library),
East of Bull Street (Factors Row, the Old Harbor Light, Site
of Fort Wayne, Site of the Filature, the Pink House, the Richard-Owens
House, the Davenport House, the McIntosh House, Colonia Park Cemetery,
the W.W. Owens House, Cathedral of St. John the Baptist, and the
Low House), and West of Bull Street (Site of Oglethorpe's
First Camp, Telfair Academy, the McAlpin House, Herty Foundation
Laboratory, West Broad Street Negro School, and the First Bryan
Bapist Church); and Outside the city (Fort Pulaski National
Monument, Fort Screven, Isle of Hope, Diamond Back Terrapin Farm,
Wormsloe Plantation, Fort Wimberley, and Bethesda Orphanage.)
Illustrations include:
the Potter residence on the Savannah River,
the Female Asylum, a Water Tank (Reservoir) for the Water System,
the Custom-House, the Metodist Episcopal Church, Count Pulaski,
Pulaski Monument, Pulaski House, Exchange, Savannah Poor House and
Hospital, St. Andrew's Hall, Hall of the Georgia Historical Society,
State Bank, Second Bapitst Church, St. John's Church, Lutheran Church,
Seal of the Trustees of "Colonia Georgia", Tomo Chachi, a silhouette
of "Sheftall Sheftall, Esq.", Colonel Francis H. Harris, the Rev.
Edward Neufville, John MacPherson Berrien, and the Tybee Lighthouse
at Fort Screven.
Wouldn't
this make a unique gift?
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