She’s the ordinary daughter of a low-country cattleman. Trapped in the heart of a brutal wilderness, will she sow the seeds of a lasting legacy?
South Carolina, 1827. Mary Adeline Walker is scared. Happy living in the middle of a big extended family, the sharp-eared seven-year-old can’t understand why her father and uncles are discussing moving to the dangerous Florida Territory. But though the independent girl is a quick learner, she worries the proposed fresh start won’t survive the treacherous trip to America’s newest land.
Arriving in Jefferson County during 1829’s harsh winter weather, Mary and her kin fight to build a homestead amid the climate, animals, and disease. And the resourceful pioneer’s fears only grow when she hears of growing tensions between the local government and the Seminole population.
Will she discover new depths of tenacity in the face of endless struggles?
Employing research from real-life journals, diaries, and letters, Cindy Roe Littlejohn creates an immersive window into one woman’s remarkable story. As you explore this unique mix of carefully authenticated details and meticulously crafted fiction, you’ll be amazed by the unsung moments from Florida’s rich and complex history.
Palmetto Pioneers: The Emigrants is an award-winning work of historical narrative nonfiction and the first book in the Palmetto Pioneers biography series. If you like compelling characters, preserving family stories, and exploring treacherous frontiers, then you’ll love Cindy Roe Littlejohn’s fascinating look into the past.
Buy The Emigrants to witness the birth of a state today! Give the gift of a good book.
Cindy Roe Littlejohn is the author of the award-winning Palmetto Pioneers trilogy, a richly researched series that brings Florida’s forgotten history to life. Her books — The Emigrants (2022), From Harmony to Hostility (2024), and Yankees in the Courthouse — follow the story of Mary Adeline Walker, an ordinary woman whose family’s journey mirrors the South’s turbulent passage through settlement, war, and reconstruction.
The first two books are award-winning novels with several gold, silver, and bronze medals between them in history and biography. the third was recently published in 2025.
Cindy began researching her family’s roots in the late 1970s but set the project aside while building a career in Florida politics, where she lobbied the state legislature for decades, mostly dealing with agriculture and natural resource issues. After retiring in 2014, she returned to her passion for history and storytelling, determined to craft a narrative that was both authentic and engaging. Instead of writing a genealogical record, she turned to narrative nonfiction to capture the spirit of the people, places, and struggles that shaped early Florida.
When she isn’t writing, Cindy enjoys leading historical walking tours, speaking to book clubs and community groups, and digging through archives to uncover stories that have long been overlooked. She lives in rural Florida, where the landscape and history of the South continue to inspire her work.
A mixture of non-fiction historical information and family pioneer stories about migration from South Carolina to Florida territory in 1800s. This is the way I truly enjoy history over just memorizing dates and facts. It all just makes it more real and interesting with a more human spin included alongside historical facts. I am eager to read the next one to continue to journey of the Walker family.
I thoroughly enjoyed the journey with William and Mary plus their families in Florida. They prospered and prepared as their state and nation moved toward the start of the Civil War. The ending seemed rushed and abrupt in this one. It just seemed the author decided I am finished and will continue the rest of the story in the next one. I was surprised when there wasn't another chapter but the appendix. I do enjoy the author's way of presenting history through the eyes of the people who lived it over just facts and dates.
I received an advance review copy for free, and I am leaving this review voluntarily.
This reads more like a historical fiction than a biography. The author uses lots of historical information to tell the story but creates characters to help tell the story in an interesting and less dull facts only kind of way. As a native Floridan it was interesting although towards the end I felt like some of the historical information became a little tedious to read and got away from the storytelling aspect a bit.