Historical Collections Of The Georgia Chapters Daughters Of The American Revolution. Vol. 1: Seventeen Georgia Counties. Published With An Index By Lelia Thornton Gentry
Historical Collections Of The Georgia Chapters Daughters Of The American Revolution. Vol. 1: Seventeen Georgia Counties. Published With An Index By Lelia Thornton Gentry
Price: $43.50
Sale Price: $43.07
Product #: CF9311D
Quantity:

 Product Information:
Details:   

Historical Collections of the Georgia Chapters Daughters of the American Revolution. Vol. 1: Seventeen Georgia Counties. Published with an Index by Lelia Thornton Gentry; 439 pp; Paperback; Published: 1926, 1931; Reprinted: 2002; ISBN: 9780806345802; Item # CF9311D

The title of this first volume in a scarce series of Georgia source records compiled by members of various chapters of the Georgia D.A.R. is somewhat misleading. While the coverage extends to seventeen Georgia counties, fully two-thirds of the book deals with Franklin County. Each chapter begins with a brief description of the county records covered, which, in most cases, are among the oldest extant and date from the mid-eighteenth to the early nineteenth century. By and large, the material for the other sixteen counties--Baldwin, Bullock, Clarke, Jackson, Jasper, Jefferson, Jones, Laurens, Lincoln, Madison, Morgan, Pulaski, Putnam, Tatnall, Telfair, and the city of Augusta--consists of marriage records naming the bride and groom, and name indexes to wills and estates. Other miscellaneous records include tax lists, guardians' returns, names of justices of the peace, and, in the case of the city of Augusta, the records of St. Paul's Church. The coverage for Franklin County is much more extensive and includes, besides indexes to marriages and wills and administrations, biographies of Revolutionary War soldiers, bounty records, will abstracts, deeds, lists of jurors, land grants, names of surveyors, and more. There is also a miscellaneous chapter devoted to Revolutionary soldiers buried in North Carolina. Our edition includes the separately published Index to Volume 1, which refers to a staggering 30,000 individuals cited in the text.