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   <title>Forget-me-nots of Bath N.C.</title>
   <title_alternative></title_alternative>
   <digital_object>
   <exhibit>Eastern North Carolina Digital History Exhibit</exhibit>
   <project>Bath Tricentennial</project>
   <category id="Bath2">Bath, from its Bicentennial to 1955</category>
   <subcategory>none</subcategory>
   <creator>Bragg, Ada Satterthwaitie</creator>
   <creation_date>1926-00-00</creation_date>
   <issued_date>0000-00-00</issued_date>
   <modification_date>0000-00-00</modification_date>
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   <format_original>Book</format_original>
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   <extent>44</extent>
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<name>Special Collections</name>
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<name>http://150.216.68.30/ipac20/ipac.jsp?session=L113921U5E187.4157&amp;profile=joyner&amp;uri=link=3100020~!2922865~!3100001~!3100002&amp;aspect=basic_search&amp;menu=search&amp;ri=2&amp;source=~!alsdb&amp;term=William+Blount+Rodman+Papers%2C+1783-1976&amp;index=UTL#f</name>
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<name>http://www.lib.ecu.edu/SpclColl/ead/vault/frmvault/0329.frame.html</name>
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<name>William Blount Rodman Papers</name>
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<name>William Blount Rodman Papers, #329.166.c</name>
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   <subject></subject>

   <description type="pinote">Local Bath resident Ada Satterthwaite Bragg published the following collection of poems in 1926, soon after the 1924 dedication of a marker commemorating Bath history and as North Carolina&rsquo;s Episcopalians were beginning to travel to St. Thomas Church as something of a pilgrimage. Bragg&rsquo;s poems are a fascinating mix of themes. Using subject matter derived mainly form Bath&rsquo;s history, Bragg both praises and condemns the people of Bath&rsquo;s past. Of particular interest is Bragg's lengthy poem "The Settlers" which treats everything from the Tuscarora War of 1711-1713 to Blackbeard to the Reverend George Whitefield's curse on the town of Bath.</description>
   <description type="trans"><pg n="0" name="cover"><lb/>Forget-me-nots<lb/>Of<lb/>Bath, N. C.<lb/></pg></description>
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   <alt>Image of Book: Forget-me-nots of Bath N.C.</alt>
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