Emily Chubbuck Judson (1817-1854) was a nationally known writer of the mid-nineteenth century. Writing as Fanny Forester, her creations appeared in the national magazines (The Columbian, The Knickerbo
The Old Governor's Mansion served as the home of Georgia's governors from 1839-1868. Considered to be one of the finest examples of High Greek Revival architecture in the United States, the mansion wa
After a death at the White Camellia Orphanage in Lexsy, Georgia, young Pip Tatnall leaves to ride the rails--a path filled with self-understanding in the cruel but sometimes lovely world of Depression
Ben M. Bogard was the preeminent leader of Landmark Baptists during the first half of the twentieth century. He was the personification of polemics, engaging the political, cultural, and religious iss
The C.S. Lewis Phenomenon names the way in which Lewis's presentations of Christianity in both his fiction and non-fiction depend upon the conventions of the public sphere-this study explores three fa
Baptist Principles is intended to serve three segments of our Baptist life. It is first of all for individuals, pastors, and laity who want to do serious thinking about Baptist principles, work throug
Young, Newman, and Young present readers with a comprehensive examination of the rise of Atlanta, Georgia from regional capital to international city and the key policy decisions that made its grow
Melungeons are a group of people in the Appalachian Mountains who for centuries sought to evade legal and social sanctions against their racially mixed heritage by telling various tales of their exoti
Southernmost Art and Literary Portraits features eighty-five black-and-white studies, many of which are being made public here for the first time. This collection is the first gallery of portraits to
In introducing his intellectual biography of Maynard Adams (1919-2003), Blackburn (U. of Virginia) remarks: "It is rare to find a major philosopher who was born and reared on a working farm." He trace