James Stephens Bulloch moved his family to Roswell, Georgia, in the late 1830s. James, his wife Martha, and three of their children owned and enslaved a number of individuals, as did many white and some "colored" families in the South. This book presents the life story, as it can be documented, of four of these men and women. Some twenty-seven others are named herein; however, their story is currently lost to the ages, never documented, and most likely forgotten.
Read More
James Stephens Bulloch moved his family to Roswell, Georgia, in the late 1830s. James, his wife Martha, and three of their children owned and enslaved a number of individuals, as did many white and some "colored" families in the South. This book presents the life story, as it can be documented, of four of these men and women. Some twenty-seven others are named herein; however, their story is currently lost to the ages, never documented, and most likely forgotten.
Read Less