Genealogy of the Griggs Family

Genealogy of the Griggs Family
Author: Walter Scott Griggs
Publisher:
Total Pages: 142
Release: 1926
Genre: Reference
ISBN:

"The earliest colonial ancestors bearing the name of Griggs, settled in Massachusetts, Virginia and North Carolina. The New England families descended from George and Thomas who arrived from England about the year 1635. The Virginia emigrants were transported by different individuals and each Griggs settled in a different county. From Virginia the descendants of the colonists moved to Putnam County, Georgia, and from thence scattered through the Southern states and later to the West and Southwest."--Preface.

A Woman of Noble Wit

A Woman of Noble Wit
Author: Rosemary Griggs
Publisher: Troubador Publishing Ltd
Total Pages: 200
Release: 2021-09-08
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1800466110

Few women of her time lived to see their name in print. But Katherine was no ordinary woman. She was Sir Walter Raleigh’s mother. This is her story.

A Literary Life of Sutton E. Griggs

A Literary Life of Sutton E. Griggs
Author: John Cullen Gruesser
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 273
Release: 2022-05-14
Genre:
ISBN: 0192856316

Writing, publishing, and marketing five politically engaged novels that appeared between 1899 and 1908, Sutton E. Griggs (1872-1933) was among the most prolific African American authors at the turn of the twentieth century. In contrast to his Northern contemporaries Paul Laurence Dunbar and Charles Chesnutt, Griggs, as W. E. B. Du Bois remarked, "spoke primarily to the Negro race," using his own Nashville-based publishing company to produce four of his novels. Griggs pastored Baptist churches in three Southern states and played a leading role in the influential but understudied National Baptist Convention. Until recently, little was known about the personal and professional life of this religious and community leader. Thus, critics could only contextualize his literary texts to a limited degree and were forced to speculate about how he published them. This literary biography, the first written about the author, draws extensively on primary sources and late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century periodicals, local and national, African American and white. A very different Sutton Griggs emerges from these materials--a dynamic figure who devoted himself to literature for a longer period and to a more profound extent than has ever been previously imagined but also someone who frequently found himself embroiled in controversy because of what he said in his writings and the means he used to publish them. The book challenges currently held notions about the audience for, and the content, production, and dissemination of politically engaged US black fiction, altering the perception of the African American literature and print culture of the period.