The Tattnall County, Georgia Superior Court Records, 1805-1832

The Tattnall County, Georgia Superior Court Records, 1805-1832
Author: Gordon Anthony Thompson
Publisher:
Total Pages: 400
Release: 2005-01-01
Genre: Court records
ISBN: 9780974015415

"This book of transcriptions from the Tattnal Superior Court minutes ... were taken from two bound volumes of records available at the Tattnall Courthouse Probate Office during the fall of 2003. These records reflect the history of the frontier court held on the banks of the Ohoopee River. The 1801 Legislative Act that created Tattnall County stipulated that court business would be 'carried on in the house of Zachariah Cox near the sawmills just west of the Ohoopee.' By 1833, court was moved to the new courthouse in Reidsville, Georgia."--Introduction.

The Tattnall County Inferior Court Records 1805-1832

The Tattnall County Inferior Court Records 1805-1832
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 183
Release: 2003
Genre: Court records
ISBN: 9780974015422

"Detailed transcription of inferior court records of tattnall county Georgia during years of 1805-1832. Includes records of wills, indigents, orphans, jury lists and court officials. Also includes glossary, list of terms related to records and detailed index used for gencologists studying families in early South Georgia along colonial coast. Nonfiction, historical, reference, genealogy, law."

Daisy Tales and Other Stories of My Grandfather's Younger Days in the South Georgia Piney Woods

Daisy Tales and Other Stories of My Grandfather's Younger Days in the South Georgia Piney Woods
Author: Joseph P. Byrd, IV
Publisher: Dorrance Publishing
Total Pages: 172
Release: 2021-12-27
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1637641303

Daisy Tales and Other Stories of My Grandfather’s Younger Days in the South Georgia Piney Woods By: Joseph P. Byrd, IV Daisy Tales and Other Stories of My Grandfather’s Younger Days in the South Georgia Piney Woods is a book of stories, remembrances and maybe a few tall tales as recounted by the author’s maternal grandfather, William Leroy Edwards. Much of the material, obtained by his father, was transcribed by his mother in the summer of 1955 when his widowed grandfather visited their home. Upon reading his grandfather’s stories, the author was transported back in time to the Georgia frontier and impressed with his sense of humor. Initially, thinking it a project to share with family, the author concluded these stories would appeal to a larger readership who would be interested in memoirs/history/Southern humor in addition to family history.