The families in these two volumes are not related. Each volume also contains unrelated Varners. Vol. 1 however is primarily about two brothers, Adam and John, who moved into South Carolina from Maryland before the Revolutionary War. The families later moved into Georgia and Alabama. Vol. 2 is mostly about John Varner and his wife, Mary Pettigrew, who married during the 1750's in Virginia and then into what is now South Carolina.
This world we live in is not at peace.
... south from Varnertown to work as laborers at the Carolina Nursery and Florist near the school.6 William and Geneva Varner had another son named William Richmond Varner, who married Mary ... family in the Wolcott photographs. Varnertown / 95.
Albemarle is the county seat of Stanly County, located amidst the rolling hills of the North Carolina piedmont.
This book according to Benjamin Quarles, is 'of the greatest significance for the study of race relations in America.
See Chambers-Schiller, Liberty a Better Husband. Other important works have since emerged on single women: Berend, “Cultural and Social Sources of Spinsterhood”; Hill, Women Alone; Froide, Never Married; Tallentire, ...
7, 17–23, 72-76, 212–14; James T. Sears, Growing up Gay in the South: Race, Gender, and Journeys of the Spirit (New York: Haworth Press, 1991), pp. 13,64–65; Morris Dickstein, Gates of Eden: American Culture in the Sixties (New York: ...
... Varner family , the patriarch of which , Will Varner ( Orson Welles ) , is the most powerful man in the hamlet . He ... South , and family relationships . The black stereotypical theme does not occur except perhaps when a young black boy ...
James T. Sears, Rebels, Rubyfruit, and Rhinestones: Queering Space in the Stonewall South (New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press, 2001), 319. 15. Wesley Chenault and Stacy Braukman, Gay and Lesbian Atlanta (Charleston: Arcadia, ...
granddaughter, Mary was a short, fat, red-head; the exact opposite of Marshall who was tall, thin, and blond. This couple raised their family and farmed among a large extended family on Sleepy Creek in northern Edgefield County.
Equally important, Williamson uses these stories to underscore themes of race, class, economics, politics, religion, sex and violence, idealism and Romanticism--"the rainbow of elements in human culture"--that reappear in Faulkner's work.