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"These Men She Gave" tells the story of Athens, Georgia, during the
turbulent years of the Civil War. John F. Stegeman details the many
changes Athens and Clarke County underwent during the war. The
community was highly involved with the seccession movement and the
formation of the Confederacy. Stegeman tells how the town was able
to escape destruction on an August day in 1864 when the Civil War
came to the area and how the town would eventually lose many men to
the war. The book includes appendices that include information such
as a list of the members of the Ladies Aid Society in 1961, a
roster of Clarke County companies in the army of Northern Virginia,
and mortality lists of Clarke County troops in major battles.
Everyone knows about Herschel Walker, but what about George
Woodruff, who, in a fogbound game against Sewanee, passed his
helmet into their secondary and then handed the ball off to Hafford
Hay, who ran untouched into the endzone? Athens is famed for its
postgame victory parties, but who can recall the mountainous
bonfire in 1910 that, when ignited, blew out every windowpane in
three nearby campus buildings? Herty Field, the University of
Georgia's first gridiron, is now a parking lot, but the glory lives
on in this classic, fast-paced chronicle of Bulldogs' football from
1891 to 1916.
Throughout her life, Catharine Littlefield Greene struggled to
clear her own place as an individual within a society that was
itself fighting for its place as an independent nation. In Caty,
John and Janet Stegeman follow the life of a woman whose spirit and
determination led her far beyond the domestic concerns of most
women of her day. The wife of Revolutionary War general Nathanael
Greene, Caty was a close friend of George and Martha Washington, a
business partner of Eli Whitney, and mistress of two Georgia
plantations. As a voracious reader who preferred the company of men
to that of women, Caty courted gossip and near scandal as she,
unlike most of the women of her time, maintained friendships with
men, most of whom were friends of her husband. Indeed, Nathanael
Greene encouraged Caty to join in the political discussions he and
his friends enjoyed, and at such gatherings Caty found herself at
the center of the tumultuous activity of the Revolution. Caty also
came to know firsthand the effects of the political discussions. As
a devoted wife and the mother of five children, Caty faced the
challenges of trying to maintain a semblance of normal family life
in the cruel circumstances of war, of shouldering in the absence of
her husband the financial responsibilities and burdens usually
reserved for men. Although many of Caty's concerns reflected those
of other women of her time, her story, Harvey Jackson suggests in
his forward, has importance even beyond the study of women in the
years surrounding the Revolution. Caty witnessed and at times
participated in some of the most crucial events in the history of
the new nation, and her story adds an additional degree of
definition to our knowledge of our national origins.
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