Paulette Snoby RN, BSN, MPA is an award-winning research nurse and medical historian who writes about 18th and 19th Century medical care from the Southern perspective. Born in Connellsville, Pennsylvania and educated at the University of Pittsburgh, Mrs. Snoby resides in Roswell, Georgia. She is a docent for the Teaching Museum North of Fulton County Schools, the Roswell Historical Society and Barrington Hall. She is a member of the Daughters of Union Veterans of the Civil War, National Museum of Civil War Medicine, the Society of Civil War Surgeons, American Civil War Center, Atlanta History Center, and the Museum of the Confederacy. Her website is WWW.CWAtlantaNurse.com. Mrs Snoby’s first book was April’s Revolution: A Modern Perspective of American Medical Care of Civil War Soldiers and African Slaves. It was released for publication in March 2014 and won the 2015 Lulu Downey Cadawalder Award. Her latest book released on July 1, 2015 is Georgia’s Colony of Roswell, One man’s Dream And The People Who Lived it. Both books are nonfiction, filled with the author’s photographs, and factual information in an easy to read format. The books are based on extensive research and vital to understanding our country’s past.