Newsletters
Subject
Subject Source: Library of Congress Subject Headings
Found in 63 Collections and/or Records:
Equal Rights Collection - Box 1, 1924-1925
Digital Collection
Collection number: 3E03C8D9-3BA7-299D-48B2-227F54FAB9F9
Dates:
1924-1925
Equal Rights Vol. XI No. 8,10 April (5,19) 1924, April 5, 1924
File — Box 1, Folder: 2
Collection number: Folder 2
Scope and Contents
From the Collection:
Equal Rights was a publication of the National Woman's Party. Began in 1923, it was the successor to the failed Suffragist. Its name is representative of its purpose: the editors of the newsletter believed that the only way to achieve equality amongst the sexes was to introduce an Equal Rights Amendment to the Constitution. In addition to lobbying for the introduction of a Constitutional Amendment, it discussed feminist...
Dates:
April 5, 1924
Folder 4: Honora , 1994 - 1998
File — Box 1, Folder: 4
Collection number: 4
Scope and Contents
Issues of Honora the VSU Honors Program Newsletter.
Dates:
1994 - 1998
Folder 5: Honors Program Newsletters, 1990 - 1993
File — Box 1, Folder: 5
Collection number: 5
Scope and Contents
From the Collection:
This collection contains informational brochures and pamphlets for Valdosta State University's Honors Program. Included are VSU's Honors Program Newsletters The Honora (1994-1998,2002)and VSC Honors Program Newsletter (1990-1993). Also it houses Honors Program memos from 1985, and information about the Southern Regional Honors Council conference held at VSC in 1987.
Dates:
1990 - 1993
Folder 8: Newsletters and Notecard, 1983 - 1984
File — Box 4, Folder: 8
Collection number: 8
Scope and Contents
Library Notes Newsletter of Valdosta State college Library. May 16, 1983.
Pre-Law Newsletter Southeastern Association of Pre-Law Advisors. Two issues: July 1984 and October 1984.
Notecard of the print, Eagle and Salmon, by Henry Hunt. No date.
Dates:
1983 - 1984
Lowndes County Historical Museum Website Archive with "Yesterday and Today" Newsletters
Unprocessed
Collection number: aq-2025-013
Mu Omicron, Newsletter, October 2022 [Electronic records]
Unprocessed
Collection number: aq-2022-017
Dates:
Oct. 2020; Acquired: October 31, 2022
Old Berrien: Newsletter of the Berrien Historical Foundation, 2007-present
Series
Collection number: CA-012-002
Abstract
The Old Berrien Newsletters series consists of seventeen issues produced by the Berrien County Historical Foundation between 2007 and the present. The newsletters document a wide range of topics relating to the history, culture, and development of Berrien County, Georgia, and the surrounding Wiregrass region. Each issue focuses on a single historical subject, drawing on archival research, family papers, oral histories, newspaper accounts, and local...
Dates:
2007-present
Old Berrien: Newsletter of the Berrien Historical Foundation, 2007 - Summer 2025
Unprocessed
Collection number: AQ-2025-027
Dates:
2025-05-06
Old Berrien: Newsletter of the Berrien Historical Foundation, Volumes 3 & 4 (Fall-Winter 2025)
Unprocessed
Collection number: AQ-2025-054
Dates:
Acquired: 2025-09-05; Acquired: 2025-12-05
Old Berrien Newsletter, Volume 1, Number 2 (Winter 2007): “The Great Alapaha Train Wreck—March 25, 1911”, Winter 2007
Item
Collection number: ca-012-002-002
Scope and Contents
This issue describes one of the most tragic losses of life in Berrien County history: a train wreck in which the southbound Dixie Flyer passenger train left the tracks and plunged into the Alapaha River just east of Alapaha.Subjects (Names): Baumwart, A. F.; Culpepper, Warner; Fletcher, W. D.; Gaskins, Gladys; Griffin, Jimmy; Knight, Jack; Knight, Jane; Lee, Kenneth “Slim”; Longshore, H. J.; Parnell, Charlie J.; Patten, Maxie; Peters, Bernys W.; Powell, J. E.; Seymore, Mary Jane;...
Dates:
Winter 2007
Old Berrien Newsletter, Volume 2, Number 1 (Spring 2008): “The Last Hanging in the Old County Jail”, Spring 2008
File
Collection number: ca-012-002-003
Description
This issue focuses on “The Last Hanging in the Old County Jail,” documenting the 1909 execution of Marshall Lewis in the Berrien County Jail in Nashville, Georgia. The newsletter recounts the murder of assistant postmaster Clifford Rutherford during a burglary in Lenox on April 26, 1909, Lewis’s arrest, trial, confession, and execution. It includes extensive excerpts from The Nashville Herald describing the investigation, the public response, and the legal proceedings leading to the July 9,...
Dates:
Spring 2008
Old Berrien Newsletter, Volume 2, Number 2 (Winter 2008): “The Excursion / A Getaway to Mayhaw Lake, Dixie Lake, or Lucy Lake”, Summer 2008
File
Collection number: ca-012-002-004
Description
This newsletter issue details popular early 20th-century recreational getaways in Berrien County, Georgia, highlighting Mayhaw Lake, Dixie Lake, and Lucy Lake. These resorts offered residents a means of rest and relaxation before the widespread availability of radios, televisions, or automobiles. Mayhaw Lake, built in 1914 by Elias Moore "Hun" Knight near Ray City, was known for its sulfur spring-fed swimming pool, roller skating rink, bowling alley, and baseball diamond, attracting patrons...
Dates:
Summer 2008
Old Berrien Newsletter, Volume 3, Number 1 (Summer 2009): “The Old Courthouse”, Winter 2009
File
Collection number: ca-012-002-005
Description
This newsletter issue details the historical evolution and significance of the Berrien County courthouses, particularly emphasizing the challenges and symbolic importance of the clock in the second, most recognizable structure. The county's judicial proceedings initially convened in a log schoolhouse in 1856, followed by the construction of the first purpose-built, wood-framed courthouse in 1858, which later served as the New Hansell Hotel before its demolition in 1925. The current brick...
Dates:
Winter 2009
Old Berrien Newsletter, Volume 4, Number 1 (Spring 2010): “The Opera House and Majestic Theater”, Summer 2010
File
Collection number: ca-012-002-006
Description
This issue traces the full history of Nashville’s New Opera House and the later Majestic Theater, located on the south side of Courthouse Square. Built in 1912 as a three-story opera house above the Nashville Herald offices, the building hosted stage vaudeville acts and silent films accompanied by piano, organ, or small orchestras. The theater struggled with attendance and underwent multiple closures, name changes, and owners—operating at different times as Sweat’s Opera House, the DEAL, and...
Dates:
Summer 2010
Old Berrien Newsletter, Volume 4, Number 2 (Fall 2010): “The Gator Children of Berrien County”, Fall 2010
File
Collection number: ca0-12-002-007
Description
This document investigates the local legend of the Gator Children of Berrien County, Georgia, confirming their existence and shedding light on their challenging lives. These two siblings, Madison (Mattie/Matt) and Bettie (Betty) Cook, children of Jack and Melissa M. Cook, were afflicted with a severe form of ichthyosis, a genetic skin disorder characterized by dry, scaly skin, deafness, unusual teeth, and limited mobility, often requiring them to crawl. From at least 1905, their parents...
Dates:
Fall 2010
Old Berrien Newsletter, Volume 5, Number 1 (Spring 2023): “Taming Blind Tigers”, Winter 2023
File
Collection number: ca-012-002-008
Description
This issue examines the history of “Blind Tigers” in Berrien County—local terms for individuals or locations engaged in the illegal sale of liquor during the early twentieth century. Drawing on The Nashville Herald, The Tifton Gazette, and other contemporary newspapers from the 1900s–1930s, the article traces how “Blind Tigers” operated through hidden wall openings or deceptive admission schemes that allowed alcohol to be “given away” during prohibition. The newsletter recounts major raids,...
Dates:
Winter 2023
Old Berrien Newsletter, Volume 5, Number 2 (Summer 2023): “The Nashville Bottling Works”, Spring 2023
File
Collection number: ca-012-002-009
Description
This issue traces the history of the Nashville Bottling Works, beginning with its origins in 1905 when Homer J. Hall and Jackson Whitehurst established a small bottling operation in Sparks and began selling soda to customers in Nashville. By 1906 the plant moved permanently to Nashville under Joel I. Norwood, whose popular “High Life Ginger Ale” became a regional favorite. Ownership transitioned several times before Benjamin A. Deal Jr. took over in 1912 and expanded the business with...
Dates:
Spring 2023
Old Berrien Newsletter, Volume 5, Number 3 (Fall 2023): “Sheboggy and Shebargie”, Summer 2023
File
Collection number: ca-012-002-010
Description
This issue explores the history of two well-known Berrien County country stores—Shebargie in the New Lois community and Sheboggy near Alapaha—both of which served as important rural gathering places for several decades. Shebargie, originally known as Whispering Pines and built in the late 1920s by Otto E. Summerlin, operated as a store, grist mill, and local social center featuring the community’s first radio. Through a succession of owners including Bernys Peters, K.M. Miller, Edwin Smith,...
Dates:
Summer 2023
Old Berrien Newsletter, Volume 5, Number 4 (Winter 2023): “Snakes!”, Fall 2023
File
Collection number: ca-012-002-011
Description
This issue compiles historical newspaper accounts and oral traditions documenting the persistent danger of snakes in Berrien County from the late 19th century through the mid-20th century. Drawing extensively from the Nashville Herald, Lanier County News, and Adel News, the article recounts encounters with rattlesnakes, moccasins, and other venomous species across farms, homes, sawmills, churches, and rural roads. Reports include near-misses, dramatic killings, and deadly strikes—such as the...
Dates:
Fall 2023
