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Runaways and the Last of the GualeRunaways and the Last of the Guale

Runaways and the Last of the Guale

By None

Current price: $6.29
Original price: $6.99
Visit retailer's website
Runaways and the Last of the Guale

Coles

Runaways and the Last of the Guale

By None

Current price: $6.29
Original price: $6.99
Loading Inventory...

Size: Kobo eBook

Visit retailer's website
*Product information and pricing may vary - to confirm current pricing, availability, shipping, and return information please contact Coles. In the event of a pricing discrepancy, the retailer's price will apply.
Inside these pages lies an epic tale, hidden in metaphorical clay vessels, hidden in word of mouth. Set on Tybee Island, Little Tybee Island, Savannah, Georgia, and Saint Helena Island, South Carolina, it is the story of the remarkable Milam family. In the era before the Civil War, this family saw all human beings as their brothers. They were opposed to slavery, and they anguished over the displacement of the Indians of the region. But they worked in the system of their day. Over generations they saved runaway slaves and sustained hidden enclaves of Guale Indians. Those Indians themselves heroically helped runaways adjust to hidden and harsh environments and became links on the Underground Railroad. Author Jack Anderson grew up on Tybee Island in the shadow of the lighthouse which features prominently in the story. He knows of what he speaks: the creeks, the rivers, the tides, the watercraft, the winds and waves that are the pulse of the Milam family's adventure. He knows the souls of the White folks, the Indians, the Gullah-Geechee who come alive in this story of bravery and sacrifice and triumph.
Inside these pages lies an epic tale, hidden in metaphorical clay vessels, hidden in word of mouth. Set on Tybee Island, Little Tybee Island, Savannah, Georgia, and Saint Helena Island, South Carolina, it is the story of the remarkable Milam family. In the era before the Civil War, this family saw all human beings as their brothers. They were opposed to slavery, and they anguished over the displacement of the Indians of the region. But they worked in the system of their day. Over generations they saved runaway slaves and sustained hidden enclaves of Guale Indians. Those Indians themselves heroically helped runaways adjust to hidden and harsh environments and became links on the Underground Railroad. Author Jack Anderson grew up on Tybee Island in the shadow of the lighthouse which features prominently in the story. He knows of what he speaks: the creeks, the rivers, the tides, the watercraft, the winds and waves that are the pulse of the Milam family's adventure. He knows the souls of the White folks, the Indians, the Gullah-Geechee who come alive in this story of bravery and sacrifice and triumph.

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