The Project Gutenberg eBook of Revolutionary Reader: Reminiscences and Indian Legends
Title: Revolutionary Reader: Reminiscences and Indian Legends
Author: Sophie Lee Foster
Release date: July 24, 2014 [eBook #46400]
Most recently updated: October 24, 2024
Language: English
Credits: Produced by Greg Bergquist, John Campbell and the Online
Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
file was produced from images generously made available
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TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE
Obvious typographical errors and punctuation errors have been corrected after careful comparison with other occurrences within the text and consultation of external sources.
More detail can be found at the end of the book.
Revolutionary Reader
Reminiscences and Indian Legends
COMPILED BY
SOPHIE LEE FOSTER
State Regent
Daughters of the American Revolution of Georgia
ATLANTA, GA.:
BYRD PRINTING COMPANY
1913
COPYRIGHTED 1913
BY
SOPHIE LEE FOSTER
ately dedicate this book to the Daughters of the
American Revolution of Georgia.
September 4, 1913.
Mrs. Sheppard W. Foster,
Atlanta, Georgia.
My Dear Mrs. Foster:—To say that I am delighted with your Revolutionary Reader is to state the sheer truth in very mild terms. It is a marvel to me how you could gather together so many charmingly written articles, each of them illustrative of some dramatic phase of the great struggle for independence. There is much in this book of local interest to each section. There is literally nothing which does not carry with it an appeal of the most profound interest to the general reader, whether in Georgia or New England. You have ignored no part of the map. I congratulate you upon your wonderful success in the preparation of your Revolutionary Reader. It is marvelously rich in contents and broadly American in spirit.
Sincerely your friend,
(Signed) Lucian Lamar Knight.
September 8, 1913.
Mrs. S. W. Foster,
711 Peachtree Street.
I like very much your plan of a Revolutionary reader. I hope it will be adopted by the school boards of the various states as a supplementary reader so that it may have a wide circulation.
Yours sincerely,
Joseph T. Derry.
CONTENTS
| PAGE | |
| Preface | 9 |
| America | 11 |
| Washington's Name | 12 |
| Washington's Inauguration | 13 |
| Important Characters of the Revolutionary Period in American History | 14 |
| Battle of Alamance | 20 |
| Battle of Lexington | 22 |
| Signers of Declaration | 35 |
| Life at Valley Forge | 37 |
| Old Williamsburg | 46 |
| Song of the Revolution | 52 |
| A True Story of the Revolution | 53 |
| Georgia Poem | 55 |
| Forts of Georgia | 56 |
| James Edward Oglethorpe | 59 |
| The Condition of Georgia During the Revolution | 61 |
| Fort Rutledge of the Revolution | 65 |
| The Efforts of LaFayette for the Cause of American Independence | 72 |
| James Jackson | 77 |
| Experiences of Joab Horne | 79 |
| Historical Sketch of Margaret Katherine Barry | 81 |
| Art and Artists of the Revolution | 84 |
| "Uncle Sam" Explained Again | 87 |
| An Episode of the War of the Revolution | 88 |
| State Flowers | 93 |
| Georgia State History, Naming of the Counties | 95 |
| An Historic Tree | 100 |
| Independence Day | 101 |
| Kitty | 102 |
| Battle of Kettle Creek | 108 |
| A Daring Exploit of Grace and Rachael Martin | 111 |
| A Revolutionary Puzzle | 112 |
| South Carolina in the Revolution | 112 |
| Lyman Hall | 118 |
| A Romance of Revolutionary Times | 120 |
| Fort Motte, South Carolina | 121 |
| Peter Strozier | 123 |
| Independence Day | 125 |
| Sarah Gilliam Williamson | 127 |
| A Colonial Hiding Place | 129 |
| A Hero of the Revolution | 131 |
| John Paul Jones | 132 |
| The Real Georgia Cracker | 135 |
| The Dying Soldier | 136 |
| When Benjamin Franklin Scored | 139 |
| A Revolutionary Baptising | 139 |
| George Walton | 140 |
| Thomas Jefferson | 143 |
| Orators of the American Revolution | 150 |
| The Flag of Our Country (Poem) | 154 |
| The Old Virginia Gentleman | 155 |
| When Washington Was Wed (Poem) | 160 |
| Rhode Island in the American Revolution | 162 |
| Georgia and Her Heroes in the Revolution | 168 |
| United States Treasury Seal | 173 |
| Willie Was Saved | 174 |
| Virginia Revolutionary Forts | 175 |
| Uncrowned Queens and Kings as Shown Through Humorous Incidents of the Revolution | 185 |
| A Colonial Story | 192 |
| Molly Pitcher for Hall of Fame | 195 |
| Revolutionary Relics | 196 |
| Tragedy of the Revolution Overlooked by Historians | 197 |
| John Martin | 204 |
| John Stark, Revolutionary Soldier | 206 |
| Benjamin Franklin | 209 |
| Captain Mugford | 211 |
| Governor John Clarke | 214 |
| Party Relations in England and Their Effect on the American Revolution | 221 |
| Early Means of Transportation by Land and Water | 228 |
| Colonel Benjamin Hawkins | 236 |
| Governor Jared Irwin | 240 |
| Education of Men and Women of the American Revolution | 243 |
| Nancy Hart | 252 |
| Battle of Kings Mountain (Poem) | 255 |
| William Cleghorn | 257 |
| The Blue Laws of Old Virginia | 259 |
| Elijah Clarke | 264 |
| Francis Marion | 266 |
| Light Horse Harry | 274 |
| Our Legacy (Poem) | 276 |
| The Ride of Mary Slocumb | 277 |
| The Hobson Sisters | 284 |
| Washington's March Through Somerset County, N. J. | 289 |
| Hannah Arnett | 293 |
| Button Gwinnett | 298 |
| Forced by Pirates to Walk The Plank | 300 |
| Georgia Women of Early Days | 301 |
| Robert Sallette | 308 |
| General LaFayette's Visit to Macon | 312 |
| Yes! Tomorrow's Flag Day (Poem) | 317 |
| Flag Day | 319 |
| End of the Revolution | 328 |
| Indian Legends | |
| Counties of Georgia Bearing Indian Names | 330 |
| Story of Early Indian Days | 331 |
| Chief Vann House | 332 |
| Indian Tale | 334 |
| William White and Daniel Boone | 336 |
| The Legend of Lovers' Leap | 337 |
| Indian Mound | 344 |
| Storiette of States Derived from Indian Names | 346 |
| Cherokee Alphabet | 348 |
| The Boy and His Arrow | 351 |
| Indian Spring, Georgia | 353 |
| Tracing The McIntosh Trail | 367 |
| Georgia School Song | 369 |
| Index | 371 |
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
| Facing Page | |
| Fraunces Tavern | 11 |
| Ruins of Old Fort at Frederica | 58 |
| Monument to Gen. Oglethorpe | 60 |
| Indian Treaty Tree | 98 |
| The Old Liberty Bell | 130 |
| Carpenter's Hall | 170 |
| Monument Site of Old Cornwallis | 266 |
| Birthplace of Old Glory | 318 |
| Chief Vann House | 330 |
| Map of McIntosh Trail | 366 |
| Map of Georgia, Showing Colonial, Revolutionary and Indian War Period Forts, Battle Fields and Treaty Spots | 370 |
PREFACE.
Since it is customary to write a preface, should any one attempt the somewhat hazardous task of compiling a book, it is my wish, as the editor, in sending this book forth (to live or die according to its merits) to take advantage of this custom to offer a short explanation as to its mission. It is not to be expected that a volume, containing so many facts gathered from numerous sources, will be entirely free from criticism. The securing of material for compiling this book was first planned through my endeavors to stimulate greater enthusiasm in revolutionary history, biography of revolutionary period, Indian legends, etc., by having storiettes read at the various meetings of the Daughters of the American Revolution, and in this way not only creating interest in Chapter work, but accumulating much valuable heretofore unpublished data pertaining to this important period in American history; with a view of having same printed in book form, suitable for our public schools, to be known as a Revolutionary Reader.
At first it was my intention only to accept for this reader unpublished storiettes relating to Georgia history, but realizing this work could not be completed under this plan, during my term of office as State Regent, I decided to use material selected from other reliable sources, and endeavored to make it as broad and general in scope as possible that it might better fulfill its purpose.
To the Daughters of the American Revolution of Georgia this book is dedicated. Its production has been a labor of love, and should its pages be the medium through which American patriotism may be encouraged and perpetuated I shall feel many times repaid for the effort.
To the Chapters of the Daughters of American Revolution of Georgia for storiettes furnished, to the newspapers for clippings, to the American Monthly Magazine for articles, to Miss Annie M. Lane, Miss Helen Prescott, Mr. Lucian Knight and Professor Derry, I wish to express my deep appreciation for material help given.
Sophie Lee Foster.