Post Tagged with: "Michael Gagnon"

NEW for 7/12: Ukrainian mission trip and a new book

NEW for 7/12: Ukrainian mission trip and a new book

Click here to read the latest edition. In this issue:
TODAY’S FOCUS: Morsberger heard air raid sirens on Ukrainian mission trip
EEB PERSPECTIVE: New book of Gwinnett’s transformation raises at least one question
SPOTLIGHT: Law Office of J. Michael Levengood, LLC
FEEDBACK: Are “widows and orphans” today’s “single moms and their children?”
UPCOMING: GC&B opens application for Green Youth Advisory Council
NOTABLE: Here are ways to enjoy a vacation, while relieving stress 
RECOMMENDED New York by Edward Rutherfurd
GEORGIA TIDBIT: Guidestones offer10 principles to ensure humankind’s survival
MYSTERY PHOTO: The tree, the fence, building and big sky: where is it?
LAGNIAPPE: CALENDAR: Historical Society to hear talk July 18 on last slave ship

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by · July 12, 2022 · Full issues
Gagnon

BRACK: New book of Gwinnett’s transformation raises at least one question

By Elliott Brack  |  A new book from the University of Georgia Press is entitled “Gwinnett County, Georgia, and the transformation of the American South, 1818-2018.” The book is edited by two professors, Michael Gagnon of Flowery Branch, who is an associate professor of history at Georgia Gwinnett College, and Matthew Hild of Atlanta, a lecturer at Georgia Tech.

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Rodriquez

NEWS BRIEFS: Grab snow gear to play in the snow in Duluth on Dec. 4

Grab your snow boots and mittens because it’s about to snow in Downtown Duluth. Kick off the holiday season by joining us at Deck the Hall on December 4 from 2-7 p.m. 

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by · November 30, 2021 · News
Gagnon

FOCUS: GGC professor makes exploring family history a little easier

By Edward Foster | Michael Gagnon, an associate professor of history at Georgia Gwinnett College who lives in Sugar Hill, has produced a series of web pages that should interest anyone who wants to explore their own family history, the local history of Gwinnett County, the history of Georgia, or the history of the US in the 1800s.

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by · May 19, 2015 · Today's Focus