Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-nr4z6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-19T00:39:30.927Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Inequality and the Punishment of Minor Offenders in the Early 20th Century

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 April 2024

Abstract

This article extends recent theorizing on 19th- and early 20th-century social control to the punishment of minor offenders in the American South. Despite surface differences in state control and in court contexts, the punishment of convicted misdemeanants strikingly resembled its more serious counterpart. The racial composition of both chain-gang and penitentiary populations was similar, as were trends in the rate at which the public and private sector forcefully expropriated the labor of black and white males. Depressed economic conditions adversely affected all punishment rates, regardless of race. Although more circumscribed in impact, racial inequality and labor supply and demand also affected incarceration in the chain gang. The author considers directions for future research and theory.

Type
Symposium: Crime, Class, and Community—An Emerging Paradigm
Copyright
Copyright © 1993 by The Law and Society Association

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

An earlier draft of this article was presented at the annual meetings of the American Society of Criminology, 20–23 November, San Francisco.

References

References

Adams, Kenneth, & Cutshall, Charles R. (1987) “Refusing to Prosecute Minor Offenses: The Relative Influence of Legal and Extralegal Factors,” 4 Justice Q. 595.Google Scholar
Adamson, Christopher R. (1983) “Punishment after Slavery: Southern State Penal Systems, 1865–1890,” 30 Social Problems 555.Google Scholar
Adamson, Christopher R. (1984) “Toward a Marxian Penology: Captive Criminal Populations as Economic Threats and Resources,” 31 Social Problems 435.Google Scholar
Alfini, James J., & Passuth, Patricia M. (1981) “Case Processing in State Misdemeanor Courts: The Effect of Defense Attorney Presence,” 6 Justice System J. 100.Google Scholar
Allen, H. K. (1937) “Administration of Minor Justice in Selected Illinois Counties,” 31 Illinois Law Rev. 1047.Google Scholar
Ashman, Allan (1975) Courts of Limited Jurisdiction: A National Survey. Chicago: American Judicature Society.Google Scholar
Austin, Thomas L. (1985) “Does Where You Live Determine What You Get? A Case Study of Misdemeanant Sentencing,” 76 J. of Criminal Law & Criminology 490.Google Scholar
Ayers, Edward L. (1984) Vengeance and Justice: Crime and Punishment in the 19th Century South. New York: Oxford Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Baker, Ray Stannard (1917) “The Negro Goes North,” 34 World's Work 314.Google Scholar
Baker, Ray Stannard (1973 [1908]) Following the Color Line. Williamstown, MA: Corner House.Google Scholar
Barkai, John L. (1978) “Lower Criminal Courts: The Perils of Procedure,” 69 J. of Criminal Law & Criminology 270.Google Scholar
Bartley, Numan V. (1983) The Creation of Modern Georgia. Athens: Univ. of Georgia Press.Google Scholar
Baron, Harold M. (1971) “The Demand for Black Labor: Historical Notes on the Political Economy of Racism,” 5 Radical America, March/April, p. 1.Google Scholar
Beck, E. M., & Tolnay, Stewart E. (1990) “The Killing Fields of the Deep South: The Market for Cotton and the Lynching of Blacks, 1882–1930,” 55 American Sociological Rev. 526.Google Scholar
Beck, E. M., Massey, James L., & Tolnay, Stewart E. (1989) “The Gallows, the Mob, and the Vote: Lethal Sanctioning of Blacks in North Carolina and Georgia, 1882 to 1930,” 23 Law & Society Rev. 317.Google Scholar
Blalock, Hubert M. Jr. (1967) Toward a Theory of Minority-Group Relations. New York: John Wiley & Sons.Google Scholar
Blauner, Robert (1972) Racial Oppression in America. New York: Harper & Row.Google Scholar
Box, Steven (1987) Recession, Crime, and Punishment. Totowa, NJ: Barnes & Noble.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Box, Steven, & Hale, Chris (1982) “Economic Crisis and the Rising Prisoner Population in England and Wales,” 17 Crime & Social Justice 20.Google Scholar
Box, Steven, & Hale, Chris (1985) “Unemployment, Imprisonment and Prison Overcrowding,” 9 Contemporary Crises 209.Google Scholar
Box, G. E. P., & Tiao, G. C. (1975) “Intervention Analysis with Applications to Economic and Environmental Problems,” 70 J. of the American Statistical Association 70.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Byrd, Phil G. (1897) Report of Special Inspector of Misdemeanor Convict Camps of Georgia. Atlanta: Franklin Printing & Publishing Co.Google Scholar
Candler, A.D. (1900) Message of the Governor of Georgia to the General Assembly, 24 Oct. Atlanta: Franklin Printing & Publishing Co.Google Scholar
Carr, Lois Green (1987) County Government in Maryland 1689–1709. New York: Garland Publishing, Inc.Google Scholar
Chambliss, William J., & Seidman, Robert B. (1971) Law, Order and Power. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley.Google Scholar
Chamlin, Mitchell B., and Liska, Allen E. (1992) “Social Structure and Crime Control Revisited: The Declining Significance of Intergroup Threat,” in Liska 1992a.Google Scholar
Chiricos, Theodore G., & Delone, Miriam A. (1992) “Labor Surplus and Punishment: A Review and Assessment of Theory and Evidence.” Presented at Conference on Inequality, Crime and Social Control, Athens, GA.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cloyd, Jerald W. (1977) “The Processing of Misdemeanor Drinking Drivers: The Bureaucratization of the Arrest, Prosecution, and Plea Bargaining Situations,” 56 Social Forces 385.Google Scholar
Cohen, William (1976) “Negro Involuntary Servitude in the South 1865–1940: A Preliminary Analysis,” 62 J. of Southern History 31.Google Scholar
Comptroller General of the State of Georgia (1874–1936) Report of the Comptroller General of the State of Georgia. Atlanta: various publishers.Google Scholar
Corzine, Jay, Huff-Corzine, Lin, & Creech, James C. (1988) “The Tenant Labor Market and Lynching in the South: A Test of Split Labor Market Theory,” 58 Sociological Inquiry 261.Google Scholar
Davis, Allison, Gardner, Burleigh B., & Gardner, Mary R. (1941) Deep South: A Social Anthropological Study of Caste and Class. Chicago: Univ. of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
DeCanio, Steven J. (1974) Agriculture in the Postbellum South: The Economics of Production and Supply. Cambridge: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Dollard, John (1937) Caste and Class in a Southern Town. New Haven, CT: Yale Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Engerrand, Steven W. (1981) “‘Now Scratch or Die’: The Genesis of Capitalistic Agricultural Labor in Georgia 1865–1880.” Doctoral diss., Univ. of Georgia, Athens.Google Scholar
Feeley, Malcolm M. (1979) The Process Is the Punishment: Handling Cases in a Lower Criminal Court. New York: Russell Sage Foundation.Google Scholar
Fligstein, Neil (1981) Going North: Migration of Blacks and Whites from the South, 1900–1950. New York: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Flynn, Charles L. (1983) White Land, Black Labor: Caste and Class in Late Nineteenth Century Georgia. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Fuller, Hugh N. (1929) Criminal Court Statistics, Studies #2–#7. Atlanta: Department of Public Welfare, State of Georgia.Google Scholar
Garland, David (1990) Punishment and Modern Society: A Study in Social Theory. Chicago: Univ. of Chicago Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Georgia Department of Public Welfare (1921) Georgia's Fight against Dependency and Delinquency: First Annual Report. Atlanta: Dickerson-Roberts Printing Co.Google Scholar
Georgia Department of Public Welfare (1925) “Crime and the Georgia Courts: A Statistical Analysis,” 16 J. of the American Institute of Criminal Law & Criminology 52.Google Scholar
Georgia Department of Public Welfare (1937) Survey of Criminal Court Procedure in Georgia. A Works Progress Administration Project. Atlanta: Department of Archives & History, State of Georgia.Google Scholar
Grossman, James R. (1989) Land of Hope: Chicago, Black Southerners, and the Great Migration. Chicago: Univ. of Chicago Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hahn, Steven (1983) The Roots of Southern Populism: Yeoman Farmers and the Transformation of the Georgia Upcountry, 1850–1890. New York: Oxford Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Hart, Albert Bushnell (1910) The Southern South. New York: D. Appleton.Google Scholar
Harvey, A. C. (1981) The Econometric Analysis of Time Series. Oxford: Philip Allan Publishers.Google Scholar
Haugh, Larry D., & Box, G. E. P. (1977) “Identification of Dynamic Regression (Distributed Lag) Models Connecting Two Time Series,” 72 J. of the American Statistical Association 121.Google Scholar
Hawkins, Darnell F. (1984) “State versus County: Prison Policy and Conflicts of Interest in North Carolina,” 5 Criminal Justice History 91.Google Scholar
Hawkins, Darnell F. (1985) “Trends in Black-White Imprisonment: Changing Conceptions of Race or Changing Patterns of Social Control?” 24 Crime & Social Justice 187.Google Scholar
Hepworth, Joseph T., & West, Stephen G. (1988) “Lynchings and the Economy: A Time-Series Reanalysis of Hovland and Sears (1940),” 55 J. of Personality & Social Psychology 239.Google Scholar
Higgs, Robert (1977) Competition and Coercion: Blacks in the American Economy 1865–1914. New York: Cambridge Univ. Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holmes, J.A. (1901) “Road Building with Convict Labor in the Southern States,” in U.S. Department of Agriculture, Yearbook of Agriculture. Washington, DC: GPO.Google Scholar
Isaac, Larry W., & Griffin, Larry J. (1989) “Ahistoricism in Time-Series Analyses of Historical Processes: Critique, Redirection, and Illustrations from U.S. History,” 54 American Sociological Rev. 873.Google Scholar
Jankovic, Ivan (1977) “Labor Market and Imprisonment,” 8 Crime & Social Justice 17.Google Scholar
Johnson, Daniel M., & Campbell, Rex R. (1981) Black Migration in America. Durham, NC: Duke Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Joint Committee of the Penitentiary (1908) “Report to the Extraordinary Session of the General Assembly,” in Journal of the House of Representatives of the State of Georgia at the Extraordinary Session of the General Assembly. Atlanta: Charles P. Byrd.Google Scholar
Klofas, John (1987) “Patterns of Jail Use,” 15 J. of Criminal Justice 403.Google Scholar
Knab, Karen Markle, ed. (1977) Courts of Limited Jurisdiction: A National Survey. Washington, DC: National Institute of Law Enforcement & Criminal Justice, U.S. Department of Justice.Google Scholar
Kousser, J. Morgan (1974) The Shaping of Southern Politics: Suffrage Restriction and the Establishment of the One-Party South, 1880–1910. New Haven, CT: Yale Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Lindquist, John H., Tutchings, Terrence, White, O. Z., & Chambers, Carl D. (1989) “Judicial Processing of Males and Females Charged with Prostitution,” 17 J. of Criminal Justice 277.Google Scholar
Lipetz, Marcia J. (1984) Routine Justice: Processing Cases in Women's Court. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Books.Google Scholar
Liska, Allen E. (1992a) Social Threat and Social Control. Albany: State Univ. of New York Press.Google Scholar
Liska, Allen E. (1992b) “Introduction to the Study of Social Control,” in Liska 1992a.Google Scholar
Liska, Allen E. (1992c) “Modeling the Conflict Perspective of Social Control.” Department of Sociology, SUNY/Albany.Google Scholar
Mahoney, Barry, Winberry, Phillip B., & Church, Thomas W. Jr. (1981) “Addressing Problems of Delay in Limited Jurisdiction Courts: A Report on Research in Britain,” 6 Justice System J. 44.Google Scholar
Makridakis, Spyros, Wheelwright, Steven C., & McGee, Victor E. (1983) Fore-casting: Methods and Applications. 2d ed. New York: John Wiley & Sons.Google Scholar
Mancini, Matthew J. (1978) “Race, Economics, and the Abandonment of Convict Leasing,” 63 J. of Negro History 339.Google Scholar
Mandle, Jay R. (1978) The Roots of Black Poverty: The Southern Plantation Economy after the Civil War. Durham, NC: Duke Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Marks, Carole (1985) “Black Labor Migration: 1910–20,” 12 Insurgent Sociologist 5.Google Scholar
Massey, James L., & Myers, Martha A. (1990) “Patterns of Repressive Social Control in Post-Reconstruction Georgia, 1882–1935,” 68 Social Forces 458.Google Scholar
Maynard, Douglas W. (1984) “The Structure of Discourse in Misdemeanor Plea Bargaining,” 18 Law & Society Rev. 75.Google Scholar
McCain, Paul M. (1954) The County Court in North Carolina before 1750. Durham, NC: Duke Univ. Press.Google Scholar
McCallie, S. W. (1911) “Use of Convicts on the Public Roads of Georgia,” 64 Engineering Record 157.Google Scholar
McCarthy, Belinda R. (1990) “A Micro-level Analysis of Social Structure and Social Control: Intrastate Use of Jail and Prison Confinement,” 7 Justice Q. 325.Google Scholar
McCleary, Richard, & Hay, Richard A. Jr. (1980) Applied Time Series Analysis for the Social Sciences. Beverly Hills, CA: Sage Publications.Google Scholar
Melossi, Dario (1985) “Punishment and Social Action: Changing Vocabularies of Punitive Motives within a Political Business Cycle,” in Mc-Call, S. G., ed., 6 Current Perspectives in Social Theory. Greenwich, CT: JAI Press.Google Scholar
Melossi, Dario (1989) “An Introduction: Fifty Years Later, Punishment and Social Structure in Comparative Analysis,” 13 Contemporary Crises 311.Google Scholar
Mileski, Maureen (1971) “Courtroom Encounters: An Observation Study of a Lower Criminal Court,” 5 Law & Society Rev. 473.Google Scholar
Montgomery, Douglas C., & Weatherby, Ginner (1980) “Modeling and Forecasting Time Series using Transfer Function and Intervention Methods,” 12 AIIE Transactions 289.Google Scholar
Myers, Martha A. (1990a) “Black Threat and Incarceration in Postbellum Georgia,” 69 Social Forces 373.Google Scholar
Myers, Martha A. (1990b) “Economic Threat and Racial Disparities in Incarceration: The Case of Postbellum Georgia,” 28 Criminology 627.Google Scholar
Myers, Martha A. (1991) “Economic Conditions and Punishment in Postbellum Georgia,” 7 J. of Quantitative Criminology 99.Google Scholar
Myers, Martha A., & Massey, James L. (1991) “Race, Labor, and Punishment in Postbellum Georgia,” 38 Social Problems 267.Google Scholar
Myers, Samuel L. Jr., & Sabol, William J. (1987) “Unemployment and Racial Differences in Imprisonment,” 16 Rev. of Black Political Economy 189.Google Scholar
Neibauer, David W. (1988) America's Courts and the Criminal Justice System. 3d ed. Pacific Grove, CA: Brooks/Cole.Google Scholar
Novak, Daniel A. (1978) The Wheel of Servitude: Black Forced Labor after Slavery. Lexington: Univ. Press of Kentucky.Google Scholar
Parker, Robert Nash, & Horwitz, Allan V. (1986) “Unemployment, Crime, and Imprisonment: A Panel Approach,” 24 Criminology 751.Google Scholar
O'Connor, James (1973) The Fiscal Crisis of the State. New York: St. Martin's Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Olzak, Susan (1990) “The Political Context of Competition: Lynching and Urban Racial Violence, 1882–1914,” 69 Social Forces 395.Google Scholar
Phillips, Charles David (1986) “Social Structure and Social Control: Modeling the Discriminatory Execution of Blacks in Georgia and North Carolina, 1925–1935,” 65 Social Forces 458.Google Scholar
Phillips, Charles David (1987) “Exploring Relations among Forms of Social Control: The Lynching and Execution of Blacks in North Carolina, 1889–1918,” 21 Law & Society Rev. 361.Google Scholar
Powell, J. C. (1969 [1891]) The American Siberia. New York: Arno Press/New York Times.Google Scholar
Prison Commission of Georgia (1897–1936) Annual Reports to the Governor of the State of Georgia. Atlanta: Georgia Department of Archives & History (microform).Google Scholar
Ragona, Anthony J., & Ryan, John Paul (1984) Beyond the Courtroom: A Comparative Analysis of Misdemeanor Sentencing: Executive Summary. Washington, DC: National Institute of Justice, U.S. Department of Justice.Google Scholar
Ransom, Roger L., & Sutch, Richard (1977) One Kind of Freedom: The Economic Consequences of Emancipation. Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Raper, Arthur F. (1936) Preface to Peasantry: A Tale of Two Black Belt Counties. Chapel Hill: Univ. of North Carolina Press.Google Scholar
Raper, Arthur F., & Reid, Ira De A. (1941) Sharecroppers All. Chapel Hill: Univ. of North Carolina Press.Google Scholar
Robertson, John A. (1974) Rough Justice: Perspectives on Lower Criminal Courts. Boston: Little, Brown & Co.Google Scholar
Rusche, Georg (1978 [1933]) “Labor Market and Penal Sanction: Thoughts on the Sociology of Criminal Justice(trans. G. Dinwiddie), 10 Crime & Social Justice 2.Google Scholar
Rusche, Georg, & Kirchheimer, Otto (1939) Punishment and Social Structure. New York: Columbia Univ. Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ryan, John Paul (1980–81) “Adjudication and Sentencing in a Misdemeanor Court: The Outcome Is the Punishment,” 15 Law & Society Rev. 79.Google Scholar
Ryan, John Paul, & Alfini, James J. (1979) “Trial Judges' Participation in Plea Bargaining: An Empirical Perspective,” 13 Law & Society Rev. 479.Google Scholar
Saye, Albert Berry (1970) A Constitutional History of Georgia 1732–1968. Rev. ed. Athens: Univ. of Georgia Press.Google Scholar
Sheffield, O. H. (1894) Improvement of Road System of Georgia. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Road Inquiry Office, Bulletin #3. Washington, DC: GPO.Google Scholar
Shelden, Randall G. (1981) “Convict Leasing: An Application of the Rusche-Kirchheimer Thesis to Penal Changes in Tennessee 1830–1915,” in Greenberg, D. F., ed., Crime and Capitalism: Readings in Marxist Criminology. Palo Alto, CA: Mayfield Publishing Co.Google Scholar
Silbey, Susan S. (1981) “Making Sense of the Lower Courts,” 6 Justice System J. 13.Google Scholar
Smith, Albert Colbey (1974) “Violence in Georgia's Black Belt: A Study of Crime in Baldwin and Terrell Counties 1866–1899.” Master's thesis, Univ. of Georgia.Google Scholar
Smith, Albert Colbey (1982) “Down Freedom's Road: The Contours of Race, Class, and Property Crime in Black-Belt Georgia 1866–1910.” Doctoral diss., Univ. of Georgia.Google Scholar
Spierenburg, Pieter (1987) “From Amsterdam to Auburn: An Explanation for the Rise of the Prison in Seventeenth-Century Holland and Nineteenth-Century America,” 20 J. of Social History 439.Google Scholar
Spitzer, Steven (1975) “Toward a Marxian Theory of Deviance,” 22 Social Problems 638.Google Scholar
Spitzer, Steven (1983) “The Rationalization of Crime Control in Capitalist Society,” in Cohen, S. & Scull, A., eds., Social Control and the State. New York: St. Martin's Press.Google Scholar
Steiner, Jesse F., & Brown, Roy M. (1970 [1927]) The North Carolina Chain Gang: A Study of County Convict Road Work. Westport, CT: Negro Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Sykes, Gary W., Vito, Gennero, & McElrath, Karen (1987) “Jail Populations and Crime Rates: An Exploratory Analysis of Incapacitation,” 15 J. of Police Science & Administration 72.Google Scholar
Tolnay, Stewart E., & Beck, E. M. (1992a) “Lethal Social Control in the South: Lynchings and Executions between 1880 and 1930.” Presented at Conference on Inequality, Crime and Social Control, Athens, GA.Google Scholar
Tolnay, Stewart E., & Beck, E. M. (1992b) “Toward a Threat Model of Southern Black Lynchings,” in Liska 1992a.Google Scholar
Tolnay, Stewart E., Beck, E. M., & Massey, James L. (1989) “Black Lynchings: The Power Threat Hypothesis Revisited,” 67 Social Forces 605.Google Scholar
Tolnay, Stewart E., Beck, E. M., & Massey, James L. (1992) “Black Competition and White Vengeance: Legal Execution of Blacks as Social Control in the American South 1890 to 1929,” 73 Social Science Q. 627.Google Scholar
Turk, Austin T. (1969) Criminality and Legal Order. Chicago: Rand McNally.Google Scholar
U.S. Bureau of the Census (1975) Historical Statistics of the U.S.: Colonial Times to 1970. Washington, DC: GPO.Google Scholar
U.S. Department of Agriculture (1951–2) Statistics on Cotton and Related Data. Agricultural Economics Bureau Statistical Bull. #99. Washington, DC: GPO.Google Scholar
U.S. Department of Interior, Bureau of Labor (1887) Second Annual Report of Commissioner: Convict Labor. Washington, DC: GPO.Google Scholar
U.S. Department of Interior, Bureau of Labor (1896) Convict Labor. Bureau of Labor Bull. #5. Washington, DC: GPO.Google Scholar
U.S. Department of Interior, Bureau of Labor (1906) Twentieth Annual Report of the Commissioner of Labor: Convict Labor. Washington, DC: GPO.Google Scholar
U.S. Department of Interior, Bureau of Labor (1914) Federal and State Laws Relating to Convict Labor. Washington, DC: GPO.Google Scholar
U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics (1925) Convict Labor in 1923. Bureau of Labor Statistics Bull. 372. Washington, DC: GPO.Google Scholar
Wallace, Dan (1981) “The Political Economy of Incarceration Trends in Late U.S. Capitalism 1971–1977,” 10 Insurgent Sociologist, Summer/Fall, p. 59.Google Scholar
Wharton, Vernon Lane (1947) The Negro in Mississippi 1865–1890. James Sprunt Studies in History & Political Science, Vol. 28. Chapel Hill: Univ. of North Carolina Press.Google Scholar
Woodman, Harold D. (1968) King Cotton and His Retainers: Financing and Marketing the Cotton Crop of the South, 1800–1925. Lexington: Univ. of Kentucky Press.Google Scholar
Woodward, C. Vann (1971) Origins of the New South, 1877–1913. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Wright, Gavin (1986) Old South, New South: Revolutions in the Southern Economy since the Civil War. New York: Basic Books.Google Scholar
Wright, R. F. (1895) “Special Report of R. F. Wright on Misdemeanor Convicts of the State of Georgia,” in W. Y. Atkinson, Special Message of the Governor of Georgia to the General Assembly (23 Oct.). Atlanta: Franklin Printing & Publishing Co.Google Scholar
Wunder, John R. (1979) Inferior Courts, Superior Justice: A History of the Justices of the Peace on the Northwest Frontier, 1853–1889. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press.Google Scholar

Case Cited

County of Walton v. Franklin, 95 Ga. 538, 22 S.E. 279 (1894).CrossRefGoogle Scholar

Statutes Cited

Georgia Laws:.Google Scholar
1865–66 Acts of the General Assembly of the State of Georgia (1866). Milledgeville, GA: Boughton, Nisbet, Barnes & Moore.Google Scholar
1866 Acts of the General Assembly of the State of Georgia (1867). Macon: J.W. Burke & Co.Google Scholar
1874 Acts and Resolutions of the General Assembly of the State of Georgia (1874). Savannah, GA: J. H. Estill.Google Scholar
1878–79 Acts and Resolutions of the General Assembly of the State of Georgia (1880). Atlanta: James P. Harrison & Co.Google Scholar
1897 Acts and Resolutions of the General Assembly of the State of Georgia (1898). Atlanta: George W. Harrison.Google Scholar
1908 Acts and Resolutions of the General Assembly of the State of Georgia, Extraordinary Session (1908). Atlanta: Charles P. Byrd.Google Scholar