Books by Don L. Shadburn in the
Pioneer Cherokee Heritage
Series
by Don Shadburn
Pioneer History Of Forsyth County, Georgia
This
736-page book is the first published history of Forsyth County. It
contains 33 chapters of detailed family histories, population and mortality
census records, slaveholders (1840-1860), marriages (1833-1853), early Baptist
and Methodist church histories and membership rolls, merchant ledger and
daybook entries (1845-1860), Old Milton County records, 203 newspaper obituaries
(1890's through 1920's), grand and petit jury lists (1833-1854), disinterment
and reinterment of graves in the Lake Lanier reservoir area(1956), 132 photos
and maps with eight pen and ink sketches and many other resources for readers
and family history sleuths. Laminated hardcase, 736 pages; 132 photos, maps,
drawings; 11 sections of appendices(Federal, State & County Records. (Third
printing; 1981, 1985, 1996)
Cherokee Planters in Georgia 1832-1838
This book of historical essays on Georgia's
11 "Cherokee counties" is the only work published anywhere on Georgia's Cherokee
natives and Indian countrymen on a grassroots level. This academic work, which
has become a standard reference, carries over 600 source notes and two indexes.
The book is illustrated with 93 plats from 1832 Cherokee ,surveys and maps of
the 11 counties. The book was reviewed in the Fall of 1990 in the Georgia
Historical Quarterly by Theda Perdue, Cherokee historian at the University of
Kentucky, by Kenneth H. Thomas in his "Genealogy" column in the Atlanta Journal
Constitution, and by Rowena Mills in the Tulsa (Okla) Tribune.
This history, sponsored by the Forsyth County Heritage
Foundation, represents the first of two volumes on Georgia's Cherokees,
mixed-bloods, and Indian Countrymen. The work is based on a careful study of
19th-century sources, primarily the Cherokee Census of 1835, 1832 survey records
of original Cherokee County, Cherokee property valuations of 1836, and records
of payments made to claimants by the government prior to removal. The book
contains detailed information (with over 600 source notes) on Cherokee planters
in 11 counties created in 1832-33 from original Cherokee County surveys: Cass
(later Bartow), Cherokee, Cobb, Floyd, Forsyth, Gilmer, Lumpkin, Murray,
Paulding, Union and Walker.
This reprint edition contains
434 pages with two indexes, source notes, and three sections of detailed
appendices: Cherokee Emigrants to Arkansas Country, 1831-32; 1834 State Census
Schedules for nine of the counties; and the text of the Treaty of New Echota,
1835-36. Illustrations include 93 plats from 1832 surveys showing Indian
improvements and town sites and 12 county maps with early town sites,
improvements, roads, ferries, and streams.
Selected Chapter Titles:
Cass [Bartow]. Empire County of Georgia
Forsyth: Gateway to the Cherokee
Frontier
Cherokee: Cradle of the Etowah Indians
Gilmer: Mother of the
Mountain Towns
Cobb: Cousin to the Creek Nation
Walker: Home of the
Chickamaugans
This perennial selling book on Cherokee farmers and Indian
countrymen (white men with Indian families) who lived on Georgia's final
frontier west of the Chattahoochee River is now available for the first time in
a laminated hardcase copy. If you missed it in 1989, take advantage of this rare
opportunity to own your personal copy of the second volume in Shadburn's
4-volume Pioneer- Cherokee Heritage Series!! This is the only book published
anywhere on Georgia's Cherokee population prior to removal years on a
county-to-county basis!
Unhallowed Intrusion: A History of Cherokee FamiIies in Forsyth
County, Georgia (1993; reprinted October 1998)
This 803-page volume is the only detailed historical and genealogical work
published on any Georgia county's Indian population. The book is illustrated
with 192 photos and plantation maps. Unhallowed Intrusion received the first
Lilla Mills Hawes Award given by the Georgia Historical Society in 1995
for the most outstanding regional history published in 1993-94. In a letter of
May 9, 1995 to the author, W. Todd Groce, Executive Director, wrote that the
Awards Committee recognized the book's "insightful use of local history,
particularly genealogical sources and family histories," and added: "The work
has significance, not only to Forsyth County, but also to the areas included in
the relocation of these families in Indian Territory." In October 1993, Kenneth
H. Thomas wrote a lengthy review in his Atlanta Journal-Constitution column.
Shadburn is recognized today as a leading research
authority on Georgia families of Cherokee blood descent.
Crimson and Sabres: A Confederate Record of Forsyth County,
Georgia
(1997, with historian Ted 0. Brooke)
This 500-page book is the first Confederate record
published on Forsyth County's Confederate veterans, pensioners and widows. Among
the detailed records is a 130-page chapter of abstracts for almost 600
pensioners, an important genealogical source. Another chapter documents all
ex-Confederate soldiers (a total of 67) whose gravesites have a Confederate
marker, including photos of the markers, in 23 cemeteries, plus the 1863 "Joe
Brown Census" and many soldier rosters for State Troops, militia, militia
cavalry, and others never before published.
Blood Kin:
Pioneer Chronicles of Upper
Georgia Centered in Forsyth County
Words of Appreciation x Foreword xi A Glimpse of Old Testament Genealogy 1. James R. Tatum: Pioneer Life in North Georgia/1-10 7. Bennett, Joel Sr., Family/61-68
I. Deed Book A: Original Cherokee and Forsyth County 1832-1834/399-434
Halftones |
AVAILABLE SOON!!!
Chief James Vann: Cherokee Bonaparte. A history and
a legend.
Part I. James Vann: Profile of a Cherokee Chief
Chapter 1. A Man of Rising Importance/1
Chief James Vann's Chattahoochee Plantation
Chapter 5. Vann's Plantation and Ferry in Forsyth County/44
Supplement A. Articles of Agreement on the Federal Road/79
Photos, maps, and other illustrations are found on pages 8, 15, 21,
29, 32, 33, 37, 38, 50, 54, 55, 64 and 69. |
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