Write It Down!

We had a good class last Saturday for non-genealogists. The class was about the importance of older members of a family writing down the things that they know for their children,  grandchildren and future generations. All too often that information is lost. I hope that each of you will take a few minutes to write down the names of your grandparents, where they were from, maiden names and any details you can remember about them.  Future generations will treasure the family stories that you pass on to them. Don’t let what you know be forgotten.

Picture courtesy of Travis Hollaway. Thanks, Travis!

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150 Years Ago Today…

On February 9, 1861, Augusta’s Chronicle and Sentinel newspaper reported the resignation of a Lt. William Boggs from the United States Army.  Like many during this time, this Augusta son resigned his commission from the United States Army and returned to Georgia to offer his services to this state.  Very little is known of his early childhood, but his education and interests in military affairs and science carried him to the United States Military Academy in West Point in 1849.  Four years later, he graduated in the top five of his class.

Boggs’ abilities were best suited to the engineering aspects of military service. He immediately was made part of Governor Joe Brown’s staff and tasked with obtaining supplies to help prepare the state for war. Soon he was transferred to Confederate service and assisted in the preparation of coastal defenses throughout the South. By war’s end he had achieved the rank of brigadier general and was the chief of staff for General Kirby Smith of the Trans-Mississippi Department.

Following the war, he became a civil engineer working in railroad construction in the western states. By 1875 he was appointed Professor of Mechanics in the Virginia Polytechnic Institute at Blacksburg, remaining there until 1881.  During 1891 he wrote his recollections of his Civil War service as a gift for his children. The later years of his life were spent in Winston-Salem, N. C., where he died September 11, 1911, at the age of eighty-two.  In June 1913 the Military Reminiscences of Gen. Wm. R. Boggs, C.S.A. was first published. An electronic version is available for viewing at http://docsouth.unc.edu/fpn/boggs/boggs.html

William Robertson Boggs was born in Augusta on March 18, 1829.   He was married to Mary Symington of Baltimore in December 1864, and this union produced five children.  Florence Corley’s book Confederate City, Augusta, Georgia, 1860-1865, lists him as one of eleven Confederate generals to come from this city.

By Russell Liner. Russell is our library’s Civil War buff. If you have questions, he has answers! He will be contributing Civil War related posts from now on. Please post your questions or suggestions for articles and he will do his best to respond.

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The African-American Experience at Redcliffe Plantation

There will be a very interesting program on February 19th at Redcliffe Plantation on Beech Island about the African-American Experience during the Civil War. The presentation includes a tour of the mansion and slave quarters and runs from 10 to noon. The cost is $8.00 for adults, $6.50 for seniors and $5.00 for children 6-16. Under sixes are free.

Call 803.827.1473 for more information about the program or directions to Redcliffe Plantation.

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ARC High School Annuals

Another wonderful gift to the Georgia Room! We’d like to thank Steve Simpson for giving us two ARC high school annuals for the years 1964 and 1965. That’s when bouffant hair-dos were all the rage, girls wore skirts and the cadet corp was still going strong. The books are available for anyone interested in a stroll down memory lane or to see what your parents or grandparents looked like once upon a time.

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1940s Telephone Books

A local resident, Barbara Harley Johnson, has graciously donated three Augusta Telephone Directories to the Georgia Room today. The directories are from 1942, 1943, and 1945. They are so interesting! On the 1943 Telephone Directory cover, there is a red banner telling people:

STOP! THINK! Is the call you’re about to make really necessary? If not, please don’t make it. Help Keep Lines and Central Offices Clear for War business

At the bottom of the front page:

ATENTION Please Do Not Make Telephone Calls During or Immediately After an Air Raid Alarm As It Is Essential That the Lines Be Kept Free for Use by the Defense Authorities. If Your Telephone Rings, However, Answer It Promptly.

This little piece of Augusta history shows the sacrifices and concerns that Augustans shared with the nation during World War II. Thank you very much Mrs. Johnson for your gift to the Georgia Heritage Room and future local history buffs.

Aspasia Luster and Dottie Demarest

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New Edgefield County Book

Slave Records of Edgefield County, South Carolina by Gloria Ramsey Lucas arrived in the Georgia Room today. Gloria is a local author who spent 6 year compiling this information. It is an invaluable resource for African Americans who are searching for their Edgefield family roots as it may allow them to penetrate the “brick wall” that many African Americans hit when trying to trace their family before 1870.

Congratulations, Gloria, and thank you for all your hard work!

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How Do You Spell That?

“But our last name isn’t spelled that way!”

That is a phrase we often hear from people new to genealogy. They don’t realize that before the advent of social security in 1939, the spelling of names was a lot more flexible. How a name was spelled often depended upon who wrote it down, what they thought they heard and how they were accustomed to spelling that name. For example, one of my family names is DeWitt but I have seen it spelled Duett. If you sound both names out they sound an awful lot alike. McBryde is another example. During the span of my ancestor Elizabeth McBryde’s life, I have seen it spelled M’Bryde, MacBryde, MacBride and so on; same person, different scribes.

Another thing that can happen is the person can change how they spell their name for their own reasons. My Aunt Kathryn was born Catherine but liked the other spelling better and she began signing her name that way.

When you are looking for ancestors and are stumped, try sounding out the last name and think of different ways that the name could be spelled phonetically. Very often, you will find them under an alternate spelling.

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150 Years Ago This Week…

On January 19, 1861, Georgia suceeded from the union and was an independent state for a few weeks. During that time, Captain Arnold Elzey, the commanding officer of the United States Arsenal in Summerville, surrendered it to Governor Joseph E. Brown. The details were worked out on January 24th and the Arsenal was duly surrendered. 

The Augusta Volunteer Battalion was supposed to be reviewed by the governor and hold a parade on the 24th but it rained so heavily the parade was called off. Undeterred by the terrible weather, several militia groups marched to the Planter’s Hotel where the governor was staying and he spoke briefly to them from a balcony according to the Daily Chronicle & Sentinel.

The Augusta Volunteer Battalion, led by Captain Alfred Cumming, guarded the Arsenal while it was in state hands. According to the newspaper, there were “friendly relations” between the volunteers and the Federal troops while they were both occupying the Arsenal together.  Captain Elzey led the Federal troops out of the city on January 29th. It was reported in the newspaper that Captain Elzey resigned his commision in the United States Army after reporting to his new post at Fort Monroe and rose to the rank of general in the Confederate Army.

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Mystery Solved!

Tonia Owens and Russell Liner from the Information Desk of the Augusta-Richmond Public Library, suggested to Travis Hollaway that the church in the painting “Old Town Augusta” by Herbert Day might be Saint Paul Baptist Church and that seems to be the correct answer. Way to go Tonia, Russell and Travis!

Erik Montgomery, the Executive Director of Historic Augusta, put it all together for Mr. Clarke, the painting’s owner, and took the picture of the church as it is today. Here is part of his email:

The painting depicts the intersection of East Boundary and Telfair Streets.  The church in the painting is Saint Paul Baptist Church, a congregation that was founded in 1921 and that built the depicted building in 1926.  (Its original building was three doors down at the corner of East Boundary and Telfair in a converted house).  

The addresses of the buildings in the painting, from left to right, are as follows:

On the north side of Telfair Street…

7 Telfair Street – the shotgun house, demolished about 1953.

9 Telfair Street – the saddlebag house [with the center chimney], demolished about 1953.

11 Telfair Street – Saint Paul Baptist Church, still standing, but brick veneered after 1939 and before 1951.  The two entries in the corner towers have been converted into windows, and one central doorway now replaces the central window.

13 Telfair Street – the double-pen house with two chimneys, still standing 

Across Telfair on the south side, only one house is visible in the painting…

2 Telfair Street – the house with the gable-end chimney.

This was such a fun project! Thank you, Erik, for allowing us all to use our sleuthing abilities and thank you everyone who worked on it.

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New Civil War Book

A new book arrived in the Georgia Room this morning; Crossroads of Conflict: A Guide to Civil War Sites in Georgia by Barry L. Brown and Gordon R. Elwell. It includes color photos, historical photographs and paintings, plus a Civil War timeline and GPS coordinates to battle sites here in Georgia.

In addition to the copy in the Georgia Room, we also have a copy that can be checked out. It is shelved with the new books on the first floor of the library.

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