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Although it is among the smallest of Georgia’s Golden Isles,
Jekyll Island boasts a depth of history rivaling that of its larger
neighbours. The island embraces two National Historic Landmarks, a
listing reserved for the nation’s most significant treasures.
More than fifty archaeological sites have been excavated on Jekyll;
others remain unexplored, including an Indian burial mound
discovered recently on the grounds of a beachfront motel. Written
in a lively, accessible style by Jingle Davis and lavishly
illustrated with photographs by Benjamin Galland, Island Passages
is a solid work of public history that presents a carefully
researched document of Jekyll Island, Georgia, from its geologic
beginning as a shifting sand spit to its present-day ownership by
the state of Georgia. While many books have been published about
Jekyll, most focus on specific erasor episodes of island
history—such as the Jekyll Island Club, the landing of the
slaveship Wanderer, and the DuBignon family dynasty. Davis and
Galland’s book makes an important contribution to the island’s
literature because it synthesizes all these aspects into a
comprehensive and beautifully executed history that will appeal to
coastal and island history aficionados and the general reader
alike.
Eighty miles south of Savannah lies St. Simons Island, one of the
most beloved seaside destinations in Georgia and home to some
twenty thousand year-round residents. In "Island Time," Jingle
Davis and Benjamin Galland offer a fascinating history and stunning
visual celebration of this coastal community.
Prehistoric people established some of North America's first
permanent settlements on St. Simons, leaving three giant shell
rings as evidence of their occupation. People from other diverse
cultures also left their mark: Mocama and Guale Indians, Spanish
friars, pirates and privateers, British soldiers and settlers,
German religious refugees, and aristocratic antebellum planters.
Enslaved Africans and their descendants forged the unique Gullah
Geechee culture that survives today. Davis provides a comprehensive
history of St. Simons, connecting its stories to broader historical
moments. Timbers for Old Ironsides were hewn from St. Simons's live
oaks during the Revolutionary War. Aaron Burr fled to St. Simons
after killing Alexander Hamilton. Susie Baker King Taylor became
the first black person to teach openly in a freedmen's school
during her stay on the island. Rachel Carson spent time on St.
Simons, which she wrote about in "The Edge of the Sea."
The island became a popular tourist destination in the 1800s, with
visitors arriving on ferries until a causeway opened in 1924. Davis
describes the challenges faced by the community with modern growth
and explains how St. Simons has retained the unique charm and
strong sense of community that it is known for today. Featuring
more than two hundred contemporary photographs, historical images,
and maps, "Island Time" is an essential book for people interested
in the Georgia coast.
A Friends Fund Publication.
Cumberland Island is the southernmost and largest barrier island on
the Georgia coast, with a history that predates the arrival of
Western civilization in the Americas. Currently, it has few full-
time residents, but its beauty brings thousands of visitors each
year from around the world. Day hikers and overnight campers bask
in Cumberland's tranquility and marvel at its natural treasures,
walking beneath canopies of live oak trees draped in Spanish moss.
Comprising three major ecosystem regions, Cumberland is home to
large areas of salt marshes and a dense maritime forest, but its
most famous ecosystem is its beach, which stretches over seventeen
miles. The island is also home to many native and nonnative
species, such as white-tailed deer, turkey, feral hogs and horses,
wild boar, nine-banded armadillos, and American alligators, as well
as many species of birds. Aside from wild horses and the remains of
Thomas M. Carnegie's estate, most visitors are unaware of the
details of the island's varied history. Cumberland's past tells a
rich and complex story, one of conquest by indigenous tribes,
French and Spanish explorers, English settlers, cotton planters,
and occupation by British and Union naval forces. Cumberland
Island: Footsteps in Time is the first book about the island that
offers readers a complete history of the island combined with
stunning photography and historical images. Richly illustrated with
more than 250 color and black-and-white photographs, it is a
comprehensive history, from native occupation to the present.
Author Stephen Doster takes the reader on a chronological journey,
outlining the key events and influential inhabitants that have left
their mark on this stretch of Georgia's coast. Each chapter focuses
on a specific era: indigenous occupation; Spanish occupation;
English occupation; the colonial period and War of 1812; the
planter era and Civil War; the Gilded Age; north-end settlements
and hotels; and the creation of a protected national seashore.
Following the Tabby Trail provides a guided tour of some of the
most significant tabby structures found along the southeastern
coast and includes more than two hundred illustrations that
highlight the human and architectural histories of forty-eight
specific sites. Jingle Davis explains how tabby-a unique
oyster-shell concrete-helps us to understand the complex past of
the coast. A tabby structure is, as the author puts it, "a
storehouse of history." Each of the site descriptions includes the
intriguing profile of a historic figure associated in some way with
the tabby. Though the first documented use of tabby in North
America was in 1672 in what is now St. Augustine, Florida, Spanish
colonists had used many of its constituent parts a century earlier.
In addition to their Spanish-speaking competitors, colonizers from
France and the British Isles also enthusiastically adopted the
building material for their colonial missions. This meant, of
course, that enslaved Africans and Indigenous peoples built with
the material. Tabby remained a fashionable, effective, and enduring
building material until shortly after the Civil War. This richly
photographed work provides readers with a guide to the
underexplored string of tabby structures still standing along the
stretch of coast between Florida and South Carolina, an
approximately 275-mile trail traced by the book from just south of
St. Augustine north to the dead town of Dorchester near
Summerville. Sites include such varied structures as ancient Late
Archaic shell mounds called middens and rings of shells thousands
of years old; Fort Matanzas, built in 1742 but named for a
sixteenth-century massacre of French colonists by St. Augustine's
Spanish founder Pedro Menendez de Aviles; Fort Mose, a significant
feature of Florida's Black Heritage Trail; and homes of the
enslaved, warehouses, Charleston's seawall, churches, and
cemeteries.
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