•December 10, 2009 •
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Tuckapaw Media is proud to announce the availability of A Campbell Journey, by Ted A. Campbell. The motto of the Campbell family is ne obliviscaris, “Do not forget.” A Campbell Journey chronicles a branch of the Campbell family from its immigrant ancestor to Virginia, Malcolm Campbell (ca. 1715 – 1764) to Elam Campbell of Beaumont, Texas (1898-1995). It describes some of the colorful men and women of this family through a period of two and a half centuries.
Author Ted A. Campbell serves as Associate Professor of Church History at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas. He is a ninth-generation descendant of Malcolm Campbell, with whom this book begins, and is the grandson of Elam Campbell, with whom the book ends.
Click here to download A Campbell Journey.
Click here to purchase A Campbell Journey.
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•February 23, 2009 •
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Tuckapaw Media has released Codex Fidelium a prayer book with texts in ancient languages (Hebrew, Greek, Latin) with English translations, set in fonts that are suggestive of ancient and medieval manuscripts. Here’s a sample.

excerpt from Codex Fidelium
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•December 31, 2008 •
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The first offering from Tuckapaw Media, A Wesley Reader, is available for purchase via CreateSpace. You can download the text here, and you can view the book on Google Books.
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•December 16, 2008 •
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The first book offered by Tuckapaw Media will be A Wesley Reader, a work which I have edited and which includes fifteen works by John Wesley (1703-1791) and his brother Charles Wesley (1707-1788). The book also includes my own introduction to these works by John and Charles Wesley, and some notes on reading their eighteenth-century English. The book is now in proof stage and should be available to purchasers and (free) downloaders in the new year.
/ted
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•December 16, 2008 •
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Welcome to Tuckapaw Media. Tuckapaw Media is a media outlet of Ted A. Campbell, and will offer a variety of media that are available for free download and also in hardcopy editions (books) and CDs (if I release music). Stay tuned right here..
“Tuckapaw” was an Anglicization of the native American name Atakapa, the group of native people who lived in southwestern Louisiana and southeastern Texas, where I grew up.
/ted
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