Through a painstaking gathering and synthesis of the surviving
documents of Georgia social history before the Revolution, many of
them fragmentary, Davis re-creates much of the texture and quality
of life in that southernmost province. In addition to black
slavery, religion, and education, he examines such elementary
questions as: what kinds of buildings Georgians lived in, how they
solved their transportation problems, the nature of criminal law
administration, and the range of occupations and vocations.
Originally published in 1976.
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