Today, Augustus Baldwin Longstreet's fame rests on
Georgia Scenes, Characters, Incidents, Etc. in the First Half Century of the Republic, a collection of sketches that he published from the office of his newspaper, the Augusta, Georgia,
State Rights' Sentinelin 1835. To Longstreet, however,
Georgia Sceneswas merely one item in a long and distinguished résumé. In 1859, when William Gilmore Simms asked him to write an autobiography for
The New American Cyclopædia, Longstreet responded with a long paragraph that allotted only one sentence to
Georgia Scenes:
[Augusts Baldwin Longstreet is] an American jurist and author, born in Augusta, [Georgia], Sept. 22, 1790. He was early sent to school, but made little progress in study, and was more expert as a cotton picker, a wrestler, and a
1601 words
Citation: Rachels, David. "Augustus Baldwin Longstreet". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 13 November 2002 [https://www.litencyc.com/php/speople.php?rec=true&UID=2786, accessed 22 November 2024.]