Coleman, Kenneth, 1930-
Variant namesKenneth Coleman, professor of history at the University of Georgia in Athens was the preeminent authority of his generation on colonial and revolutionary Georgia. He wrote what is probably the most widely read history of the state, Georgia History in Outline (1955), which has been revised many times and remains in print. As the recommended text for students preparing for the University System's Georgia history and government exam, it has proven to be the all-time best-seller of the University of Georgia Press. Coleman was born in Devereux in 1916. As a young boy he enjoyed rural life in Hancock County, where his father ran a general store. His mother, however, wanted her two sons to have a better education than Hancock County could offer, so the family moved to Atlanta in the 1920s. There Coleman and his older brother, Lee, graduated from Boys High School. Kenneth Coleman earned his A.B. and M.A. degrees from the University of Georgia in 1938 and 1940 respectively. His work with E. Merton Coulter, Georgia's most prolific historian of the first half of the twentieth century, led him to pursue a career in Georgia history. Coleman's studies were interrupted during World War II (1941-45), when he served as an army officer in Europe. He completed his doctorate in 1953 at the University of Wisconsin, where Coulter had received his graduate training. Coleman worked briefly for the U.S. Forest Service and in 1949 began his teaching career in earnest at Georgia State University, which was then the Atlanta Division of the University of Georgia. He was offered positions elsewhere in the University System but held out for a chance to teach in Athens. In 1955 he was appointed to the history faculty at the University of Georgia and moved to Athens with both of his parents, whom he continued to care for until their deaths. Coleman was a prolific writer. His major work, The American Revolution in Georgia (1958), which was the outgrowth of his Ph.D. dissertation, remains the standard general academic view of that period in Georgia history. Coleman's other works include Georgia Journeys (with Sarah Temple, 1961), Confederate Athens (1967), and Colonial Georgia (1976). An extraordinary editor, he spearheaded the most comprehensive state history to date, A History of Georgia (1977). Encouraged by Governor Jimmy Carter, who had expressed interest in the compilation of a modern history of the state, Coleman served as general editor of the work and as a contributor, along with several colleagues from the Department of History at the University of Georgia. His long-term work on the Colonial Records of Georgia was one of his favorite contributions to scholarship on Georgia's early history; he edited, or coedited with Milton Ready, volumes 20 and 27-32 (1976-89). One of his last major projects was coediting, with Charles Stephen Gurr, the two-volume Dictionary of Georgia Biography (1983). Coleman served on the Board of Curators of the Georgia Historical Society and was a member of the Georgia Trust for Historic Preservation, a member of the Georgia Commission for the National Bicentennial, and the recipient of the Governor's Award in the Humanities, which was presented to him by Governor Zell Miller, who had been one of Coleman's undergraduate students at the university. Coleman died in Athens on November 27, 1999, from injuries sustained in an automobile accident. He bequeathed one-third of his estate to the University of Georgia Press for publications in the field of Georgia studies and one-third to Young Harris College. In death, as in life, he supported and honored what he valued and loved. Kenneth Coleman (1916-1999) - New Georgia Encyclopedia http://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org (Retrieved May 18, 2009)
From the description of Kenneth Coleman Georgia Bicentennial papers, 1971-1978. (University of Georgia). WorldCat record id: 325052057
"Kenneth Coleman, professor of history at the University of Georgia in Athens was the preeminent authority of his generation on colonial and revolutionary Georgia. He wrote what is probably the most widely read history of the state, Georgia History in Outline (1955), which has been revised many times and remains in print." -- "Kenneth Coleman (1916-1999)" New Georgia Encyclopedia.
From the description of Kenneth Coleman papers, 1936-1949. (University of Georgia). WorldCat record id: 288501592
Kenneth Coleman, professor of history at the University of Georgia in Athens, was the preeminent authority of his generation on colonial and revolutionary Georgia. He wrote what is probably the most widely read history of the state, Georgia History in Outline (1955), which has been revised many times and remains in print. As the recommended text for students preparing for the University System's Georgia history and government exam, it has proven to be the all-time best-seller of the University of Georgia Press. Kenneth Coleman earned his A.B. and M.A. degrees from the University of Georgia in 1938 and 1940 respectively. His work with E. Merton Coulter, Georgia's most prolific historian of the first half of the twentieth century, led him to pursue a career in Georgia history. Coleman's studies were interrupted during World War II (1941-45), when he served as an army officer in Europe. He completed his doctorate in 1953 at the University of Wisconsin, where Coulter had received his graduate training. Coleman was a prolific writer. His major work, The American Revolution in Georgia (1958), which was the outgrowth of his Ph.D. dissertation, remains the standard general academic view of that period in Georgia history. Coleman's other works include Georgia Journeys (with Sarah Temple, 1961), Confederate Athens (1967), and Colonial Georgia (1976). An extraordinary editor, he spearheaded the most comprehensive state history to date, A History of Georgia (1977). Encouraged by Governor Jimmy Carter, who had expressed interest in the compilation of a modern history of the state, Coleman served as general editor of the work and as a contributor, along with several colleagues from the Department of History at the University of Georgia. His long-term work on the Colonial Records of Georgia was one of his favorite contributions to scholarship on Georgia's early history; he edited, or coedited with Milton Ready, volumes 20 and 27-32 (1976-89). One of his last major projects was coediting, with Charles Stephen Gurr, the two-volume Dictionary of Georgia Biography (1983). The New Georgia Encyclopedia. http://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/nge/Article.jsp?id=h-2625&sug=y Retrieved 3/19/2009.
From the description of Colonial records of Georgia (index), 19uu. (University of Georgia). WorldCat record id: 316531647
Kenneth Coleman, professor of history at the University of Georgia in Athens was the preeminent authority of his generation on colonial and revolutionary Georgia. He wrote what is probably the most widely read history of the state, Georgia History in Outline (1955), which has been revised many times and remains in print. As the recommended text for students preparing for the University System's Georgia history and government exam, it has proven to be the all-time best-seller of the University of Georgia Press. Kenneth Coleman earned his A.B. and M.A. degrees from the University of Georgia in 1938 and 1940 respectively. His work with E. Merton Coulter, Georgia's most prolific historian of the first half of the twentieth century, led him to pursue a career in Georgia history. Coleman's studies were interrupted during World War II (1941-45), when he served as an army officer in Europe. He completed his doctorate in 1953 at the University of Wisconsin, where Coulter had received his graduate training. Coleman was a prolific writer. His major work, The American Revolution in Georgia (1958), which was the outgrowth of his Ph.D. dissertation, remains the standard general academic view of that period in Georgia history. Coleman's other works include Georgia Journeys (with Sarah Temple, 1961), Confederate Athens (1967), and Colonial Georgia (1976). An extraordinary editor, he spearheaded the most comprehensive state history to date, A History of Georgia (1977). Encouraged by Governor Jimmy Carter, who had expressed interest in the compilation of a modern history of the state, Coleman served as general editor of the work and as a contributor, along with several colleagues from the Department of History at the University of Georgia. His long-term work on the Colonial Records of Georgia was one of his favorite contributions to scholarship on Georgia's early history; he edited, or coedited with Milton Ready, volumes 20 and 27-32 (1976-89). One of his last major projects was coediting, with Charles Stephen Gurr, the two-volume Dictionary of Georgia Biography (1983). Coleman died in Athens on November 27, 1999, from injuries sustained in an automobile accident. He bequeathed one-third of his estate to the University of Georgia Press for publications in the field of Georgia studies and one-third to Young Harris College. In death, as in life, he supported and honored what he valued and loved. Kenneth Coleman (1916-1999) - New Georgia Encyclopedia http://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/nge/ (Retrieved September 24, 2008)
From the description of Kenneth Coleman papers, 1732-1865. (University of Georgia). WorldCat record id: 317152641
Role | Title | Holding Repository | |
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referencedIn | Spalding, Phinizy. Phinizy Spalding papers, 1910-1994 (bulk 1931-1982). | Hargrett Rare Book and Manuscript Library | |
creatorOf | Coleman, Kenneth. Kenneth Coleman papers, 1936-1949. | ||
creatorOf | Coleman, Kenneth. Kenneth Coleman Georgia Bicentennial papers, 1971-1978. | ||
creatorOf | Coleman, Kenneth. Kenneth Coleman papers, 1732-1865. | ||
referencedIn | Cate, Margaret Davis, 1888-1961. Margaret Davis Cate papers, 1890-1964. | Hargrett Rare Book and Manuscript Library | |
creatorOf | Coleman, Kenneth. Colonial records of Georgia (index), 19uu. | ||
creatorOf | Coleman, Kenneth. Athens, Georgia, Confederate soldiers casualty list, 1861-1865. | ||
referencedIn | Kenneth Coleman papers, 20th century. |
Role | Title | Holding Repository |
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associatedWith | Candler, Allen D. (Allen Daniel), 1834-1910. | person |
associatedWith | Cate, Margaret Davis, 1888-1961. | person |
associatedWith | Georgia Commission for the National Bicentennial Celebration | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Spalding, Phinizy. | person |
associatedWith | Temple, Sarah Blackwell Gober. | person |
associatedWith | University of Georgia | corporateBody |
associatedWith | University of Wisconsin | corporateBody |
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Athens (Ga.) | |||
Georgia--Athens | |||
Georgia | |||
Georgia | |||
Georgia |
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American Revolution Bicentennial, 1976 |
College teachers |
Frontier and pioneer life |
History teachers |
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Person
Birth 1930