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Mile for mile, St. Simons Island-one of Georgia's Golden
Isles-boasts as much history as any community on the East Coast.
Originally an Indian hunting ground, it has been occupied or
invaded by Spanish missionaries, British settlers, planters and
their slaves, the Union army, the United States Navy, and
developers and tourists. The seventeen narratives in Voices from
St. Simons represent an "oral archaeological dig," writes editor
Stephen Doster. Many of those interviewed are descendants of
masters and slaves. Surprisingly, they speak of racial issues with
greater compassion than bitterness. But the volume encompasses much
more than that. Here, the people of the Golden Isles recall waving
farewell to Paul Redfern when his airplane took off from a sandy
beach on his ill-fated attempt to outdo Charles Lindbergh. They
describe jumping into a fast boat and riding to the rescue of
merchant sailors torpedoed by a German U-boat. They tell of playing
childhood sports-and dominating the competition-alongside future
NFL legend Jim Brown, who was raised on St. Simons. They remember
piloting the ship that, due to a helmsman's error, hit the Sidney
Lanier Bridge, causing one of the worst such disasters in American
history. "In some respects, the narratives reveal a plot of ground
that time forgot," Doster writes. "They present the reflections of
a cross-section of ordinary people who lived during extraordinary
times." Stephen Doster was born in 1959 in Kingston-Upon-Thames,
England, and moved with his parents and four siblings to St. Simons
Island, Georgia, in the early 1960s. His ties to the island date to
the early 1900s, when his father's family vacationed there before
the construction of a mainland causeway. His grandparents
permanently moved to St. Simons in the 1940s, building on the
grounds where a Spanish mission once stood. Growing up on the
island, Doster remembers the place as a "Mayberry with tides,"
where he and neighborhood kids played baseball on the beach,
sneaked into a resort hotel pool after football practices, and
explored the island's woods and tidal creeks. His early
recollections include seeing navy hurricane hunters fly over the
Atlantic in search of storms before the days of satellites, viewing
open Indian graves during an archaeological dig, evacuating the
island at Hurricane Dora's approach, and returning to the
destruction left in its wake. After graduating from the University
of Georgia with a Bachelor of Business Administration degree in
1983, Doster headed to Nashville, Tennessee where he has lived and
worked since. Though he has been a resident of Nashville for over
20 years, St. Simons has always been close to his heart. In 2002,
John F. Blair published his debut novel, Lord Baltimore, about a
young man's journey on the Georgia coast between Savannah and St.
Simons. Voices from St. Simons is essentially Doster's effort to
preserve the legacy of the area. For decades, he heard "local
residents utter the famous sentiment that someone should have
recorded so-and-so's recollections before she died." Reading the
obituary of a former elementary school teacher inspired him to set
up face-to-face and telephone interviews that began his oral
archaeological dig. Doster works at Vanderbilt University and lives
in Nashville with his wife, Anne.
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.
Drawing on the voices of residents from across the state, this oral
history reflects on life in Georgia as it evolved throughout the
twentieth century. Author Stephen Doster grew up on St. Simons
Island, one of Georgia's Golden Isles. He began interviewing fellow
island residents and captured their personal histories in the book
Voices from St. Simons. Now, Doster has expanded the scope of his
work to encompass the entire state of Georgia. In Georgia Witness,
Doster records the stories of residents from all across the state,
capturing the unique life and history of its many communities. Here
are the voices of influential figures and ordinary residents,
individuals of varying backgrounds and ethnicities, all of whom
remember and contribute to the legacy and lifeblood of the peach
state.
In this WWII memoir, a woman recounts her struggle to survive and
serve her country in the Women's Auxiliary Air Force. Marjorie
Terry Smith was a teenage girl living in the suburbs of London when
the Second World War began. Before it was over, her family would be
bombed out of three homes, her fiancé would be killed fighting
Rommel's forces in North Africa, and she would join the WAAF.
Stationed in the operations rooms on seven different Royal Air
Force bases, she encountered RAF legends Douglas Bader and Leonard
Cheshire, as well as the indomitable Winston Churchill. In Her
Finest Hour, Smith recounts a youth in England leading up to the
war, her six years of service, and life in a recovering England, in
which she worked for the British Overseas Airways Corporation as
well as the BBC. Vividly recalling how the war changed her life and
the world around her, Smith offers a rare insider's view of WWII
military operations from a woman's perspective, as told to her son,
Stephen Doster.
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Jesus Tree (Paperback)
Stephen Doster
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R818
R734
Discovery Miles 7 340
Save R84 (10%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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A Black man wrongly convicted of murder attempts to rebuild his
life and bring the real killer to justice, in this historical novel
based on a true story. In the summer of 1932, Ben Jordan was
wrongfully accused of killing a white pastor in Georgia. After a
hasty trial, he was sentenced to a life of grueling labor on a
chain gang and abuse at the hands of brutal wardens. But now, with
his forty-year prison sentence completed, Ben is finally returning
home. As he struggles to understand the profound changes the world
has undergone, some things remain painfully the same--including the
hateful animosity towards Black people and the fact that the real
murderer is still living the life of a genteel southerner. Working
to rebuild his life and see justice served, Ben faces one
confrontation after another--with friend, foe, and a daughter who
thinks he is dead. In this novel based on a real Depression Era
murder case, author and Georgia historian Stephen Doster presents a
vividly accurate depiction of Jim Crow's long and painful legacy.
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