JGAH Contents
2019-2023
Current Issue
Vol. XXXIX, 2023
A Life in History
By Lee Ann Caldwell
Special Issue Introduction: Forgotten Black Heroes of the Twentieth Century
By Fred R. van Hartesveldt & Christine Lutz, Guest Editors
Claudius Turner, the Dorchester Cooperative Move-ment, and African Americans in Liberty County, Georgia
By Dawn J. Herd-Clark & Felicia Jamison
Asa Hilliard: The New Education
By Samuel Wright
Open Every Door: Maxine Smith’s Lifelong Fight to Desegregate a City through Education & Equality
By Will Hodge
Bayard Rustin: Seven Decades of Activism
By Charles Boyd
John Wesley Davison and Black Advancement in Middle Georgia
By Kyle Q. Harris
Vol. XXXVIII, 2022
Lives in History: Burn, Baby Burn, or Learn, Baby Learn
By Nagueyalti Warren
Transforming History Survey Courses with OERs: The Case Study of Georgia Highlands College, 2016–2021
By Jayme Akers Feagin and Bronson Long
Relitigating a Legacy: The Measured Militancy of Attorney Austin Thomas Walden
By Preston F. Martin
Vol. XXXVII, 2021
Lives in History
By Catherine Oglesby
Obliged to Go Online: Responding to the COVID- 19 Pandemic at GSU Perimeter College in 2020
By Paul Stephen Hudson, Meyer Taffel, and Marc Zayac
Martha Williford Payne’s (Re)constructions of Race, Gender and Southern Identity in Missionary Liberia, 1850–1870
By Katherine E. Rohrer
Erasure Economics: Plantation Tourism and the Silencing of Slavery
By Will Hodge
Remembering Jacqueline Anne Rouse, 1950–2020: Scholarship, Educational Advocacy, and Mentoring as Audacious Leadership
By Kenja R. McCray, Charymayne E. Patterson, and Christy Garrison-Harrison
Vol. XXXVI, 2020
The Forgotten Witch: The Necessity of a Reexamination of Witchcraft Historiography and the Inclusion of Male Witches
By Lashonda Slaughter-Wilson
Negative Results: Me and Lloyd Gaines in Mexico City
By Thomas Aiello
Deconstructing the Legacies of Black Women Reformers: Ida B. Wells-Barnett, Mary Church Terrell, and Mary McLeod Bethune
By Kristina DuRocher
Satanic Spiders in Atlanta: Rev. J. B. Hawthorne, the New Woman, and the Lost Cause
By David B. Parker
Vol. XXXV, 2019
Lives in History
By Jamil S. Zainaldin, President Emeritus, Georgia Humanities Council
Changes in the Air: TWA, African Development, and Breaking the Color Line in 1950s Kansas City
By Patrick G. Zander, Associate Professor, Georgia Gwinnett College
Between Cold War, Détente, and Glasnost’: Perceptions of Japan in the Soviet Press, 1956-1991
By Christopher J. Ward, Professor, Clayton State University
“Dr. Thomas is a Bad Negro and I Trust You Will Not Pardon Him”: The Life and Crimes of Dr. Charles E. Thomas of Alabama
By Gary S. Sprayberry, Associate Professor, Columbus State University
Vol. XXXIX, 2023
A Life in History
By Lee Ann Caldwell
Special Issue Introduction: Forgotten Black Heroes of the Twentieth Century
By Fred R. van Hartesveldt & Christine Lutz, Guest Editors
Claudius Turner, the Dorchester Cooperative Move-ment, and African Americans in Liberty County, Georgia
By Dawn J. Herd-Clark & Felicia Jamison
Asa Hilliard: The New Education
By Samuel Wright
Open Every Door: Maxine Smith’s Lifelong Fight to Desegregate a City through Education & Equality
By Will Hodge
Bayard Rustin: Seven Decades of Activism
By Charles Boyd
John Wesley Davison and Black Advancement in Middle Georgia
By Kyle Q. Harris
Vol. XXXVIII, 2022
Lives in History: Burn, Baby Burn, or Learn, Baby Learn
By Nagueyalti Warren
Transforming History Survey Courses with OERs: The Case Study of Georgia Highlands College, 2016–2021
By Jayme Akers Feagin and Bronson Long
Relitigating a Legacy: The Measured Militancy of Attorney Austin Thomas Walden
By Preston F. Martin
Vol. XXXVII, 2021
Lives in History
By Catherine Oglesby
Obliged to Go Online: Responding to the COVID- 19 Pandemic at GSU Perimeter College in 2020
By Paul Stephen Hudson, Meyer Taffel, and Marc Zayac
Martha Williford Payne’s (Re)constructions of Race, Gender and Southern Identity in Missionary Liberia, 1850–1870
By Katherine E. Rohrer
Erasure Economics: Plantation Tourism and the Silencing of Slavery
By Will Hodge
Remembering Jacqueline Anne Rouse, 1950–2020: Scholarship, Educational Advocacy, and Mentoring as Audacious Leadership
By Kenja R. McCray, Charymayne E. Patterson, and Christy Garrison-Harrison
Vol. XXXVI, 2020
The Forgotten Witch: The Necessity of a Reexamination of Witchcraft Historiography and the Inclusion of Male Witches
By Lashonda Slaughter-Wilson
Negative Results: Me and Lloyd Gaines in Mexico City
By Thomas Aiello
Deconstructing the Legacies of Black Women Reformers: Ida B. Wells-Barnett, Mary Church Terrell, and Mary McLeod Bethune
By Kristina DuRocher
Satanic Spiders in Atlanta: Rev. J. B. Hawthorne, the New Woman, and the Lost Cause
By David B. Parker
Vol. XXXV, 2019
Lives in History
By Jamil S. Zainaldin, President Emeritus, Georgia Humanities Council
Changes in the Air: TWA, African Development, and Breaking the Color Line in 1950s Kansas City
By Patrick G. Zander, Associate Professor, Georgia Gwinnett College
Between Cold War, Détente, and Glasnost’: Perceptions of Japan in the Soviet Press, 1956-1991
By Christopher J. Ward, Professor, Clayton State University
“Dr. Thomas is a Bad Negro and I Trust You Will Not Pardon Him”: The Life and Crimes of Dr. Charles E. Thomas of Alabama
By Gary S. Sprayberry, Associate Professor, Columbus State University