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Carole W. Troxler

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Carole Watterson Troxler and Carole Troxler should link here

Carole Watterson Troxler is a historian and author in the United States. She is a professor emerita at Elon University.

She was born in LaGrange, Georgia. She received a doctorate in history from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She married George W. Troxler who also worked as a history professor at Elon.[1][2][3]

She has written about the regulator movement during the American Revolution,[4] Alamance County, Sallie Stockard,[5] and Wyatt Outlaw.

She has written about Loyalists who fled the lower South for British East Florida after the American Revolution.[6]

Susan Schramm-Pate wrote that her book on Sallie Stockyard is a "masterfully crafted biography."[5]

Writings[edit]

  • The Loyalist Experience in North Carolina. North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources, Division of Archives and Histor. 1976. ISBN 9780865261143. Search this book on [7]
  • Shuttle & Plow: A history of Alamance County, North Carolina, co-authored with William M. Vincent
  • Farming Dissenters: The Regulator Movement in Piedmont North Carolina (2011)
  • Red Dog: A Tale of the Carolina Frontier (2017), a novel[1]
  • Sallie Stockard and the Adversities of an Educated Woman of the New South (2021)[8][9]

Articles[edit]

  • "The Migration of Carolina and Georgia Loyalists to Nova Scotia and New Brunswick", Ph.D. dissertation, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (1974)[10]
  • "Refuge, Resistance, and Reward: The Southern Loyalists' Claim on East Florida, The Journal of Southern History, Volume LV Number 4, November 1989[10]
  • Article about Wyatt Outlaw, North Carolina Historical Review (October 2000)[11]
  • "William Stephens and the "Georgia Malcontents": Conciliation, Conflict, and Capitulation", The Georgia Historical Quarterly, 1983[12]

References[edit]

  1. 1.0 1.1 Gazette, Special to The. "Historian to speak at anniversary of 'Crossing of Dan'". YourGV.com.
  2. "Troxler named as Elon University historian". Burlington Times News.
  3. "Professor, administrator and University Historian George Troxler dies". Today at Elon. October 28, 2019.
  4. "Free program on the Regulator movement in the North Carolina Piedmont on February 25 - Chatham Journal Newspaper". chathamjournal.com. February 24, 2018.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Schramm-Pate, Susan (December 29, 2022). "Sallie Stockard: Adversities Met by an Educated Woman of the New South by Carole Watterson Troxler (review)". Journal of Southern History. 88 (4): 790–792. doi:10.1353/soh.2022.0192 – via Project MUSE. Unknown parameter |s2cid= ignored (help)
  6. Lee, Jean B. (1995). "Review of Loyalists and Community in North America. Contributions in American History Series". The Georgia Historical Quarterly. 79 (3): 707–709. ISSN 0016-8297.
  7. Calhoon, Robert M. (1976). "Review of The Loyalist Experience in North Carolina". The North Carolina Historical Review. 53 (4): 400–401. ISSN 0029-2494.
  8. "University of North Carolina Press, Books by Author".
  9. Troxler, Carole W. (December 15, 2021). "Sallie Stockard and the Adversities of an Educated Woman of the New South". UNC Press Books – via Google Books.
  10. 10.0 10.1 Troxler, Carole Watterson (1989). "Refuge, Resistance, and Reward: The Southern Loyalists' Claim on East Florida". The Journal of Southern History. 55 (4): 563–596. doi:10.2307/2209041 – via JSTOR.
  11. Troxler, Carole Watterson (2000). ""To look more closely at the man": Wyatt Outlaw, a Nexus of National, Local, and Personal History". The North Carolina Historical Review. 77 (4): 403–433. JSTOR 23522167 – via JSTOR.
  12. Troxler, Carole Watterson (1983). "William Stephens and the Georgia "Malcontents": Conciliation, Conflict, and Capitulation". The Georgia Historical Quarterly. 67 (1): 1–34 – via JSTOR.


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