The Goose Creek Bridge

Gateway to Sacred Places

by Michael J. Heitzler, Ed.D.


Formats

Softcover
£11.48
Hardcover
£15.94
Softcover
£11.48

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 11/10/2012

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 318
ISBN : 9781477255407
Format : Hardcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 318
ISBN : 9781477255391

About the Book

The Goose Creek Bridge is the gateway to the Saint James, Goose Creek Parish in South Carolina and the church, cemeteries, chapels, and sanctuaries within. The work chronicles the bridge as it conveyed congregants to the pews of the church on selected Easter Sundays during every era of the three-hundred year saga and describes from that perspective, key personalities and their salient institutions transcending centuries in a small but critically important section of South Carolina. Readers find an in-depth description of the Yamassee War from the perspective of those residing in its vortex. The work chronicles English soldiers chasing wily patriots on both sides of the aging bridge and three generations later, young black warriors of the United States Army with equally youthful white officers camping near the overpass. This comprehensive account explains the trauma of wars and the aftermaths, as well as the impact of public roads, taverns, rail lines and the durable values of the old and new south upon the rural people, and their sacred institutions.


About the Author

Michael James Heitzler earned a Doctor of Education Degree from the University of South Carolina. He is a Fulbright Scholar and a retired school administrator of the Berkeley School District, South Carolina. He has served as Mayor of the City of Goose Creek since 1978. He is the author of Historic Goose Creek, South Carolina, 1670-1980, published in 1983 by Southern Historical Press, Easley, South Carolina, and Goose Creek, a Definitive History, volume I published in 2005 and volume II published in 2006, by the History Press, Charleston, South Carolina. The Berkeley Chamber of Commerce published his work, George Chicken, Carolina Man of the Ages in 2011 and the City of Goose Creek and the South Carolina Historical Society published many of his articles.