Walker Family History

Walker Family History
Author: L. anette Hill
Publisher: Lulu.com
Total Pages: 60
Release: 2008-07-03
Genre: Reference
ISBN: 1435736737

The WALKER surname has been researched and included in this book. This Walker family has been traced back to Beaufort, North Carolina during 1720-1788; Rutherford, North Carolina 1786-1850. The family moved down into the State of Georgia into Thomas County, Georgia 1776-1861. The family lived in an area called Beachton in Grady County, Georgia area and settled there. Descendants can still be found in Grady County, Thomas County and surrounding areas. The family burial ground in Grady Co. Georgia - Beachton at Ocklochnee Bapt. Church Cemetery.

Freeman Walker

Freeman Walker
Author: David Allan Cates
Publisher: Unbridled Books
Total Pages: 303
Release: 2008
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1932961550

At the age of seven a mulatto slave boy, Jimmy Gates, is freed by his owner-father, separated from his mother, and sent to England for an education--which is just the beginning of his quest to understand the true meaning of moral freedom.

Freeman Walker

Freeman Walker
Author: David Allen Cates
Publisher: Unbridled Books
Total Pages: 303
Release: 2008-10-01
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1936071177

Freeman Walker is a story told by a mulatto slave, Jimmy Gates, freed by his owner-father when he is 7-years-old, separated from his mother and everything he holds dear. After receiving an unforgettable talk by his father about the rules of life he will no doubt discover on his journeys, and a copy of the Declaration of Independence, he is sent to England to get an education. Jimmy, in the first of the novel’s great ironies, has had a blissful, loving childhood and never understood he wasn’t free until his new “freedom” enslaves him miserably. Despite his loneliness for home, he learns fast and well and makes himself a good and popular student. Four years pass, and while he is waiting for his father to visit for the first time, he learns that his father’s ship has sunk and his father has drowned at sea. Bereft of financial support, mourning still his long lost mother and now his father’s death, Jimmy is sent to a London workhouse where he spends six years making saddles, reading heroic novels to his companions, being sexually abused by the proprietor, finding the comfort of prostitutes, and discovering the inspirational speeches of an Irish revolutionary named Cornelius O’Keefe, or O’Keefe of the Sword. When he is 18, dreaming himself a warrior and a hero, he returns to the States to rescue his mother. While looking for his mother in northern Virginia—he discovers that if he wears a hat he can pass for white—he gets caught in a major battle. Jimmy is overjoyed to be able to take part, but is soon overwhelmed by its horror. Untrained, and unattached to any unit, he nevertheless has a chance meeting with O’Keefe of the Sword, who is now a Union General leading a brigade of Irishmen. Jimmy saves O’Keefe on the battlefield, but later is captured himself by Confederate forces, and again made a slave, spending the next two years attached to a confederate regiment digging graves. When his unit is overrun and he is found shackled in a root cellar with his friend, a Yankee officer presents to him a terrible choice, stay locked up, or commit an atrocity and go free. He chooses to walk free. He changes his name to Freeman Walker and as he reinvents himself once again and makes his way into the mythic territory of the Great American West, the novel begins to change. He hopes to live peacefully by getting rich, and he does live peacefully and get rich, for a while. But his race catches up again, and he is lynched, and he loses his treasure, and he surrenders to the mud on the side of the road, and looks forward to the coming winter and his own demise. But into the territory that winter rides the new territorial governor, none other than his childhood hero, Cornelius O’Keefe, who the war has turned into a pacifist. Freeman’s life changes once more as he becomes O’Keefe’s secretary, and the two of them, joined by a half-breed captain named Felix Belly—three outcasts—form the only government in the Territory, a wild and savage place run by vigilantes. Their quixotic attempt to stop the vigilantes from a campaign of terror against the Natives spurs a terrible but noble adventure and brings Freeman a kind of rebirth in which he finally comes to understand the meaning of moral freedom.

William and Mary College Quarterly Historical Magazine

William and Mary College Quarterly Historical Magazine
Author: College of William and Mary
Publisher:
Total Pages: 330
Release: 1918
Genre: History
ISBN:

Publishes refereed scholarship in history and related disciplines from initial Old World-New World contacts to the early nineteenth century and beyond. Its articles, notes and documents, and reviews range from British North America and the United States to Europe, West Africa, the Caribbean, and the Spanish American borderlands. Forums and topical issues address topics of active interest in the field.

Lost Arcadia

Lost Arcadia
Author: Walter A. Clark
Publisher:
Total Pages: 246
Release: 1909
Genre: Augusta (Ga.)
ISBN:

Virginia County Records

Virginia County Records
Author: William Armstrong Crozier
Publisher: Genealogical Publishing Com
Total Pages: 108
Release: 2015-03-18
Genre: Accomack County (Va.)
ISBN: 0806304731

Vol. 1, new series, was edited by the late William Armstrong Crozier and published posthumously by Mrs. Wm. Armstrong Crozier.

Alabama Notes

Alabama Notes
Author:
Publisher: Genealogical Publishing Com
Total Pages: 288
Release: 1977
Genre: Alabama
ISBN: 0806308168

"The data presented in Alabama Notes, Volumes 3 and 4 derive primarily from county court records, specifically wills and deeds, as well as selected marriage books and are supplemented by cemetery records, census records, and numerous other records of miscellaneous origin. A sequel to Mrs. England's Alabama Notes, Volumes 1 and 2 (see Item 1680), the work at hand refers to thousands of ancestors whose records were culled from the counties of Autauga, Bibb, Butler, Clarke, Coffee, Conecuh, Dallas, Greene, Lowndes, Macon, Marengo, Monroe, Perry, Shelby, and Wilcox"--Publisher website (August 2007).

Aldace Freeman Walker Papers

Aldace Freeman Walker Papers
Author: Aldace Freeman Walker
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 1862
Genre: Panama Canal (Panama)
ISBN:

This collection provides an account of the life of Aldace Walker, Valedictorian of the Middlebury College Class of 1862. The bulk of the original letters written between 1862 and 1865 come from various camps, forts, and battles around the United States during Walker's service in the Civil War. Walker was commissioned as a First Lieutenant and eventually rose to the rank of Major. The handwritten letters cover the time between August 1862 and May 1864. Also included is a bound transcription of the original letters dating through June 1865; apparently the written letters between June 1864 and June 1865 have been lost. Most of these letters are written home to family to inform them of Walker's daily activities as a soldier in the war. Also included are later letters from Walker's jobs in the railroad and commerce industries.

Margaret Walker's "For My People"

Margaret Walker's
Author: Margaret Walker
Publisher:
Total Pages: 56
Release: 1992
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN:

"Half a century ago a young woman published a poem that was destined to reverberate through American life." "Here that poem is reprinted with thirty-eight stunning photographs that celebrate it." ""For My People" is a resounding catalog of black history, a clarion that refutes the affliction of humiliation, an indelible record of noble accomplishments. Since 1942 this enduring paean to black America has remained an everlasting appeal against racial oppression." ""I wrote most of that poem," Margaret Walker says, "in fifteen minutes on a typewriter. I think it was just after my twenty-second birthday, and I felt it was my whole life gushing out - as I had felt about my people all my life."" "Since that time the astonishing young poet whose voice rose in cadences that praise and honor black America has never ceased to stir minds and hearts to action with her credos. She became indeed the renowned poet, novelist, lecturer, teacher, and sage Margaret Walker Alexander." "In commemoration of "For My People," her first publication, and in tribute to her richly productive life, the acclaimed photographer Roland L. Freeman has joined a photo essay to Margaret Walker's poem." ""I selected photographs that call to mind the special human elements evoked by Walker, so basic to everyday life, and yet not often celebrated, elements which unravel the real beauty and the tenacity for life of African-American people."" "With this marvelous collaboration both Walker and Freeman stimulate rejoicing for the spirit of the artist who perceives and depicts the rich and vital culture of black America." "In this jubilee year of a momentous poem, "For My People" continues to resound in the hearts of African-Americans and for all who love human freedom."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved

Genealogies of Virginia Families

Genealogies of Virginia Families
Author:
Publisher: Genealogical Publishing Com
Total Pages: 3680
Release: 1981
Genre: Registers of births, etc
ISBN: 0806309474

From Tyler's quarterly historical and genealogical magazine.