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Carole Watterson Troxler (née Georgia Carole Watterson) is an American historian, educator, and author. She is a Professor Emerita at Elon University.

Early life and education. Carole Watterson was born in LaGrange, Georgia. She received an A.B. degree from the University of Georgia, followed by a PhD in history from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.[5]

Career Troxler has written about white Loyalists who fled the Southern Backcountry during the War of the American Revolution and Black Loyalists who joined the British forces in the Southern Theater. Both groups left with the British at the war’s end, and Troxler follows their subsequent lives in the loyal colonies of East Florida, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and the Bahama Islands.[14]

She has treated the pre-Revolutionary Regulator Movement, which Alan D. Watson characterized as “the most historiographically exciting and controversial topic in North Carolina's past.” Watson found her account of the May 16, 1771 defeat of the Regulators to be “the best account available of the bloodiest confrontation among white English colonials in the eighteenth century.” [15]

The background of the Regulator upheaval is the context for a book of Young Adult/Adult historical fiction, for which Troxler received a book award from the North Carolina Society of Historians.[16] Her research for Shuttle & Plow: A History of Alamance County, North Carolina (1999) led to later biographies of the African American Reconstruction leader Wyatt Outlaw [17] and the pioneer in women’s higher education Sallie Stockard. Susan Schramm-Pate wrote that Troxler’s treatment of Stockard is a "masterfully crafted biography."[3]

Personal life She was married to George Wesley Troxler (1942–2019), who also worked as a history professor at Elon. In 2010, they jointly received the Christoper Crittenden Memorial Award from the North Carolina Literary and Historical Association.[18]

Publications: Books

  • The Loyalist Experience in North Carolina. North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources, Division of Archives and History. 1976. ISBN 9780865261143.[10]
  • Shuttle & Plow: A History of Alamance County, North Carolina, co-authored with William M. Vincent. Graham, NC. 1999.[11]
  • Farming Dissenters: The Regulator Movement in Piedmont North Carolina (2011)[12]
  • The Red Dog: A Tale of the Carolina Frontier (2017), a novel.[19]
  • Sallie Stockard : Adversities Met by an Educated Woman of the New South. Chapel Hill, NC: North Carolina Office of Archives and History, University of North Carolina Press. 2021. ISBN 9780865264922.[3]
  • Pyle’s Defeat: Deception at the Racepath. Graham, NC: Alamance County Historical Association, 2003.

[1]

Publications: Articles and Essays

"'To Git out of a Troublesome Neighborhood': David Fanning in New Brunswick, 1784-1800,” North Carolina Historical Review LVI (Autumn 1979) 343-365.

"Loyalist Refugees and the British Evacuation of East Florida, 1783-1786,” Florida Historical Quarterly (July 1981) 1-28.

"William Stephens and the Georgia 'Malcontents': Conciliation, Conflict, and Capitulation,” Georgia Historical Quarterly LXVII (Spring 1983) 1-34.

"Origins of the Rawdon Loyalist Settlement," Nova Scotia Historical Review (Spring 1988) 63-76.

"Refuge, Resistance, and Reward: The Southern Loyalists' Claim on East Florida," Journal of Southern History LV (November 1989) 563-595.

"A Loyalist Life: John Bond of South Carolina and Nova Scotia, Acadiensis: Journal of the History of the Atlantic Region[Fredericton, New Brunswick] XIX (Spring 1990) 72-91.

"'The Great Man of the Settlement:’ North Carolina’s John Legett at Country Harbour, Nova Scotia, 1784-1812," North Carolina Historical Review LXVII (July 1990) 285-314.

"Community and Cohesion in the Rawdon Loyalist Settlement," Nova Scotia Historical Review XII (June 1992) 41-66.

"Allegiance without Community: East Florida as the Symbol of a Loyalist Contract in the South," Robert M. Calhoon et al, eds., Loyalists and Community in North America (Greenwood Publishing Group, Contributions in American History, No. 158, 1994).

“Hidden from History: Black Loyalists at Country Harbour, Nova Scotia,” John Pulis, ed., Moving On: Black Loyalists after the American Revolution (Garland Publishing, 1999).

“’To Look More Closely at the Man’ – Wyatt Outlaw: A Nexus of National, Regional and Personal History,” North Carolina Historical Review LXXVII (October 2000) 403-433.

Pyle’s Defeat Battlefield Survey (American Battlefield Protection Program, National Parks Service, 2000).

"Scotch-Irish among Southern Backcountry Loyalists,” Journal of Scotch-Irish Studies I no. 3 (October 2002), 142-156.

“Along the Trading Path: The Fluidity of Racial Status in the Early Eighteenth Century Southern Piedmont,” William H. Alexander et al, eds., Voices from within the Veil: African Americans and the Experience of Democracy (Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2008).[2]

“Re-enslavement of Black Loyalists: Mary Postell in South Carolina, East Florida, and Nova Scotia,” Acadiensis: A Journal of the Atlantic Region XXXVII, 2 (Summer/Autumn 2008).

“Scalawags Among Us: Alamance County Among the ‘Other Souths,’” Journal of Backcountry Studies III (Fall 2008).<[3]

“Uses of the Bahama Islands by Southern Loyalist Exiles,” Jerry Bannister and Liam Riordan, eds., The Loyal Atlantic: Remaking the British Atlantic in the Revolutionary Era (University of Toronto Press, 2012). Errington, J. (2012). "Loyalists and Loyalism in the American Revolution and Beyond. Acadiensis, 41(2). Retrieved from https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/Acadiensis/article/view/20074

“Land Tenure as Regulator Grievance and Revolutionary Tool,” in Larry E. Tise and Jeffrey J. Crow, eds., New Voyages to Carolina: Toward Reinterpretation of North Carolina History (University of North Carolina Press, 2017).[4].

“Before and after Ramseur’s Mill: Cornwallis’s Complaints and Historical Memory of Southern Backcountry Loyalists,” in Rebecca N. Brannon and Joseph C. Moore, eds., Loyalty & Revolution: Essays in Honor of Robert M. Calhoon (University of South Carolina Press, 2019). Liam Riordan, Journal of Southern History. May2020, Vol. 86 Issue 2, p447-449. Compeau, Timothy J., Canadian Historical Review, 00083755, Mar 2020, Vol. 101, Issue 1.


References 1. ^ Covington, Owen (December 28, 2017). "N.C. Society of Historians presents Elon Professor Emerita Carole Troxler with book award". Today at Elon. Retrieved 2023-07-18.

2. ^ "Free program on the Regulator movement in the North Carolina Piedmont on February 25 - Chatham Journal Newspaper". [5].

3. ^ Jump up to:a b c Review of Sallie Stockard: Schramm-Pate, Susan (November 2022). Journal of Southern History. 88 (4): 790–792. doi:10.1353/soh.2022.0192. S2CID 253372046.

4. ^ 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. JSTOR 40583300.

5. ^ "Faculty Promotions Announced at Elon College." Durham, North Carolina: The Herald-Sun, March 22, 1988, p. 1 (subscription required).

6. ^ Jump up to:a b "Historian to speak at anniversary of 'Crossing of Dan'". The Gazette-Virginian. February 10, 2019.

8. ^ Review of The Loyalist Experience in North Carolina: Calhoon, Robert M. (1976). North Carolina Historical Review. 53 (4): 400–401. JSTOR 23529461. 9. ^ Reviews of Shuttle & Plow:  Jones, Plummer Alston Jr. (Fall 2000). North Carolina Libraries. 58 (3): 78. hdl:10342/1986.  Kobrin, Lisa (April 2003). North Carolina Historical Review. 80 (2): 275. JSTOR 23522433.

10. ^ Reviews of Farming Dissenters:  Johnson, D. Andrew (April 2014). South Carolina Historical Magazine. 115 (2): 162–163. JSTOR 24332794.  Stewart, Cory Joe (November 2012). Journal of Southern History. 78 (4): 952–953. JSTOR 23795655.  Watson, Alan D. (October 2011). North Carolina Historical Review. 88 (4): 425–426. JSTOR 23523596.

11. ^ Jump up to:a b 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. JSTOR 2209041 – via JSTOR.

12. ^ 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.

13. ^ Troxler, Carole Watterson (1983). "William Stephens and the Georgia "Malcontents": Conciliation, Conflict, and Capitulation". The Georgia Historical Quarterly. 67 (1): 1–34. JSTOR 40581009 – via JSTOR.

14. ^ [6]

15. ^ <refNorth Carolina Historical Review 88:425 (October 2011)./ref>

16. ^ Covington, Owen (December 28, 2017). "N.C. Society of Historians presents Elon Professor Emerita Carole Troxler with book award". Today at Elon. Retrieved 2023-07-18.

17. ^ [7]; [8].

18. ^ [9]. "Obituary for George Wesley Troxler". The News and Observer. 2019-10-30. pp. B8. Retrieved 2023-03-05.

19. ^ Review: [10]. CorbettPOE (talk) 21:14, 1 March 2024 (UTC)CorbettPOE

  1. ^ https://www.jstor.org/stable/23522999
  2. ^ Along the Trading Path The Fluidity of Racial Status in the Early Eighteenth Century Southern Piedmont.pdf | Carole Troxler - Academia.edu
  3. ^ >https://libjournal.uncg.edu/index.php/jbc/article/viewFile/29/18
  4. ^ http://www.jstor.org/stable/45286466
  5. ^ chathamjournal.com. February 24, 2018
  6. ^ Carole Troxler. The Loyalist Research Network (unb.ca)
  7. ^ PW special report - The battle for Alamance: A look at the past and present of one of North Carolina's most divided counties, NC Newsline
  8. ^ Further reading on Wyatt Outlaw, NC history and the cost of white supremacy, NC Newsline
  9. ^ North Carolina Literary and Historical Association Award Winners, NC DNCR
  10. ^ The Red Dog: A Tale of the Carolina Frontier (Lizzy's Yarn) by Carole Troxler, Goodreads