Georgia Historic Newspapers Update Winter 2023

This winter, the Digital Library of Georgia released several new grant-funded newspaper titles to the Georgia Historic Newspapers website. Included below is a list of the newly available titles.

Titles funded by the Diocese of Savannah

Southern Cross (Atlanta), 2001-2008

Titles funded by the Forsyth County Public Library

Forsyth County News, 2013-2016, 2018-2019

Titles made available as part of the Georgia Newspaper Project’s Born Digital Program

Banks County News (Homer), 2016, 2022

Barrow News-Journal (Winder), 2022

Braselton News, 2018

Jackson Herald (Jefferson), 2022

Madison County Journal (Hull), 2022

Millen News, 2022

Pickens County Progress (Jasper), 2007

True Citizen (Waynesboro), 2022

Titles funded by the Georgia Public Library Service

Charlton County Herald (Folkston), 1908-1929

Titles funded by the Lucy Hilton Maddox Memorial Library

Early County News (Blakely), 1953-1967

Titles funded by the National Digital Newspaper Program with a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities

Atlanta Georgian, 1914

Cordele Daily Sentinel, 1920

Cordele Dispatch, 1916-1920

Cordele Dispatch, 1926-1927

Cordele Dispatch and Daily Sentinel, 1920-1926

Dawson Journal, 1883-1887

Dawson News, 1889-1925

Fitzgerald Enterprise, 1902-1912

Fitzgerald Leader Enterprise and Press, 1921-1927

Fitzgerald Leader, 1921

Leader-Enterprise (Fitzgerald), 1912-1915

Leader-Enterprise and Fitzgerald Press, 1915

Leader, Enterprise and Press (Fitzgerald), 1915-1921

Lee County Journal (Leesburg), 1904-1923

Marietta Journal, 1907-1909

Marietta Journal, 1918-1924

Marietta Journal and Courier, 1909-1918

South Western News (Dawson) 1887-1889

Weekly Georgian (Atlanta), 2013

Titles funded by the Newton County Public Library System with donations from Dr. Thomas Crews and Dr. R. Steven Whatley

Covington News, 1924-1942

Titles funded by the R.J. Taylor, Jr. Foundation

Abbeville Chronicle, 1898-1901

Advertiser (Fort Gaines), 1887-1890

Arlington Advance, 1879-1882

Blairsville Herald, 1892-1902

Clinch County News (Homerville), 1898-1911

Conyers Weekly, 1883-1888

Cordele Sentinel, 1899-1902

Enterprise (Carnesville), 1890-1892

Fitzgerald Enterprise, 1895-1912

Fort Gaines Sentinel, 1895-1902

Gibson Record, 1892-1933

Hamilton Journal, 1889-1906

Haralson Banner (Buchanan), 1884-1891

Jesup Sentinel, 1890-1901

Jones County News (Gray), 1895-1906

Lincoln Home Journal (Lincolnton), 1898-1902

Piedmont Republican (Jasper), 1891

Pike County Journal (Zebulon), 1888-1902

Schley County Enterprise (Ellaville), 1886-1888

Schley County News (Ellaville), 1889-1900

Southeast Georgian (Kingsland), 1895-1932

Spring Place Jimplecute (Spring Place), 1891-1903

Sylvania Telephone, 1879-1907

Titles funded by the Watson-Brown Foundation

Atlanta Georgian, 1915

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Flannery O’Connor’s Appearances in the Georgia Catholic Diocesan Paper The Bulletin

by Daniel Britt, Mandy Mastrovita, and Donnie Summerlin

The Digital Library of Georgia, in conjunction with our partners at the Roman Catholic Diocese of Savannah, recently digitized the historic Bulletin newspaper (1920-1962) and made it publicly available on the Georgia Historic Newspapers website.

The Bulletin was first published in January 1920 as the official organ for the Catholic Laymen’s Association of Georgia and shortly became Georgia’s leading Catholic newspaper.

In 1963, the publication split into two separate diocesan papers, the Bulletin (Archdiocese of Atlanta) and the Southern Cross (Diocese of Savannah). Among the paper’s vast array of content, it [still] includes reviews of Catholic written works.

From 1956 to 1964, Georgia writer Flannery O’Connor regularly contributed to the paper’s book reviews section. However, her first appearance in the publication was where she was credited as a budding cartoonist.

The Bulletin (Augusta, Ga.) 1920-1957, June 26, 1943, page 10

Stephanie Braddy, Director of Archives & Records Management, Catholic Diocese of Savannah, notes that for O’Connor researchers “the articles offer further insight into Ms. O’Connor’s wit and personality, as well as her firmly held beliefs related to writing, and Catholicism.”

Well-known as a devout Catholic, she reviewed 143 titles spanning genres in both nonfiction and fiction, but, more specifically, she almost always explored Christian subject matter.

As evidenced by her desire to review works by controversial figures such as the French Jesuit priest and scientist Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, O’Connor displayed a deep interest in increasing her intellectual engagement with Catholicism.

Matt Davis, Director of Historic Museums at Georgia College & State University, observes that : “Flannery O’Connor kept a very strict schedule during the last years of her life in Milledgeville.  “Rising early to attend mass, she would then spend the remainder of her morning writing as her health allowed. With easy online access to O’Connor’s work in The Bulletin, the public and scholars of all levels have been provided another window to show how her faith and writing intertwined.”

These reviews were intended for a Catholic audience and focused on religious topics. As a result, they provide insights into O’Connor’s writing process not readily found in her works of fiction.

In his introduction to Leo J. Zuber’s compilation of O’Connor book reviews The Presence of Grace and Other Book Reviews by Flannery O’Connor, Carter W. Martin remarks, “one of the pleasures. . . is to savor the quality of Flannery O’Connor’s mind at work on the serious intellectual content of her faith. Here is confirmation, if we need it, that her art arose from religious convictions that she subjected to intense scrutiny not only in her heart but in her mind as well.”

Below, we’ve curated select pages from the Bulletin featuring writing by and about Flannery O’Connor. The paper’s run is available on the Georgia Historic Newspapers website, https://gahistoricnewspapers.galileo.usg.edu/lccn/gua1449731/ , and O’Connor’s appearances have been gathered together here.

Selected images: 

O’Connor’s first book review appeared in the Bulletin’s March 3, 1956 issue, an issue in which her collection of short stories, entitled ‘A Good Man is Hard to Find,’ was also reviewed. Regarding her first book review, O’Connor noted to Notre Dame professor John Lynch, “As for fiction, the motto of the Catholic press should be: We guarantee to corrupt nothing but your taste.”

The Bulletin, March 3, 1956. https://gahistoricnewspapers.galileo.usg.edu/lccn/gua1449731/1956-03-03/ed-1/seq-15/

In an unusually lengthy three-column Bulletin article, O’Connor reviewed Pierre Teilhard de Chardin’s ‘The Phenomenon of Man.’

The Bulletin (Monroe, Ga.), February 20, 1960. https://gahistoricnewspapers.galileo.usg.edu/lccn/gua1189460/1960-02-20/ed-1/seq-3/

A front-page editorial for The Georgia Bulletin’s book supplement section, by O’Connor, entitled “Fiction is Subject With A History – It Should Be Taught that Way.” She argues the importance of a firm understanding of the past, writing that “many students go to college unaware that the world was not made yesterday…”

The Georgia Bulletin (Atlanta, Ga.), March 21, 1963. https://gahistoricnewspapers.galileo.usg.edu/lccn/sn22193774/1963-03-21/ed-1/seq-8/
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