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Books > History > American history
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Swannanoa Valley
(Paperback)
Mary McPhail Standaert, Joseph Standaert
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Discovery Miles 5 140
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The Swannanoa Valley lies to the east of Asheville, North Carolina,
and is surrounded by some of the highest mountains in the eastern
United States. The eastern boundary of the valley follows the crest
of the Blue Ridge Mountains, and travelers entering through the
Swannanoa Gap emerge into the beautiful "Land of the Sky." In the
1900s, multiple large religious assemblies were founded here.
Montreat, Ridgecrest, the YMCA Blue Ridge Assembly, and Christmount
have preserved thousands of acres of forested mountain slopes for
more than a century. The valley is drained by the Swannanoa River,
which meanders 18 miles westward, finally merging with the French
Broad River near Biltmore. Swannanoa Valley showcases the rich
recreational and cultural history of this scenic mountain area.
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Siler City
(Paperback)
Marian Rogers-Lindsay
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R560
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Discovery Miles 5 140
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Siler City is located in the piedmont region of North Carolina, on
the western side of Chatham County. The railroad first ran through
the area in 1884, and the community was officially established in
1887. Blacksmith shops, livery stables, cotton gins, and sawmills
were early resources that attracted trade. Lumber mills, furniture
manufacturers, and a yarn plant came to town and supported its
early industrialization. In 1972, Frances Bavier, better known as
"Aunt Bee" from The Andy Griffith Show, retired from acting and
bought a house in Siler City, where she lived the remainder of her
days. Today, Siler City is a unique town that offers local
residents and visitors a variety of activities, including an active
artist community, Mount Vernon Springs, parks, and local sporting
events at area high schools. Through this collection of historical
photographs, Siler City showcases the rich industrial, commercial,
and communal history of this small Southern town.
The Providence Police Department has served New England's
second-largest city from its beginnings in 1651 with the
appointment of a town sergeant to today's force of nearly 500 men
and women. Officially established in 1864, policing in Providence
has changed considerably from the days of night watchmen armed with
handheld rattle alarms and nightsticks. Whether quelling the
violent street riots of 1914, enforcing Prohibition, or fighting
the New England mob, the PPD has evolved to meet the complex
challenges posed by the city. It also boasts a history of
leadership among the nation's law enforcement agencies, being among
the first to incorporate women into the department's ranks, create
innovative campaigns to reduce traffic fatalities, and pioneer the
use of trained canines to aid in police work. Today, cutting-edge
telecommunications and forensic analysis in crime fighting continue
to protect the city of nearly 178,000.
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Mount Pleasant
(Paperback)
Melissa Weinbrenner, James McGregor
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R558
R512
Discovery Miles 5 120
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Mount Pleasant lies atop a tree-covered hill in the midst of East
Texas timber country. The native Caddo Indians referred to the hill
as "pleasant," and so it was named. Though it hails from within the
historic area known as "Devil's Triangle," the city has been dubbed
"the sweetest town in Texas." This area has been alternately
ignored, fought over, and claimed, proving the people of Mount
Pleasant are resilient, adaptable, and consistently hardworking. It
is the kind of stable community that showcases many of the
strengths of America. The city's location as a byway along
transportation routes, including roads, railroads, and an
interstate highway, has contributed to its growth over the years as
industrial businesses have come to town. Named one of the best
small towns in America, it currently serves as the trailer
manufacturing capital of the United States. This "bass capital of
Texas" boasts more than 17,000 acres for fishing, swimming, and
waterskiing, as well as bird watching along the Texas Bluebird
Trail.
At the turn of the 20th century, the town of Hamden, Connecticut,
"the Land of the Sleeping Giant," was a patchwork of small hamlets,
largely rural and agricultural. During the next 100 years, it would
undergo a dramatic transformation; as orchards and fields gave way
to factories and subdivisions, Hamden's population grew from only a
few thousand at the beginning of the century to over 60,000. In the
time of war needs, local industries like the Web Shop factory and
High Standard Manufacturing retooled to meet demands. The middle of
the century saw the appearance of some of the first shopping malls
in the state, including Hamden Plaza. Major universities attracted
workers, families, intellects, and authors. Hamden was the
childhood home of poet laureate Donald Hall, the residence of
playwright Thornton Wilder, and the birthplace of Ernest Borgnine.
As the town's diversity grew, the community faced the challenges
and opportunities of each generation and, inevitably, its identity
evolved.
Arizona's 20 national parks and monuments celebrate the natural
wonders and rich heritage of Arizona, preserved through the efforts
of countless citizens and the American Antiquities Act of 1906.
Aggressively implemented by eight US presidents, this legislation
permits the president to unilaterally proclaim sites as national
monuments without congressional action. The Antiquities Act was
applied in Arizona 23 times, more so than any other state in the
union. Using more than 200 historical photographs, many of which
have never been published, this book contains the stories of the
creation of each of Arizona's national parks and monuments,
emphasizing the importance of the landscape and cultural heritage
to Arizona's identity.
When the Germans came to Atlantic County in 1855, they imagined a
community with an urban center surrounded by a farm district. This
would be a great industrial and agricultural community, served by
direct railroad and maritime connections to Philadelphia and New
York City. In 1858, the urban center these pioneers envisioned
became Egg Harbor City. Eleven miles toward the coast is
Pleasantville. Originally home to fishing and whaling settlers, it
officially became a municipality in 1888. Its proximity to the
increasingly popular Atlantic City helped Pleasantville to grow and
prosper. Egg Harbor City and Pleasantville showcases the rich
history of these two communities through a unique collection of
historical images.
Evangeline Parish is located near the center of Louisiana, between
the prairies and wetlands of the south and the hills and piney
woods of the north. Culturally, too, it embraces both the French
south and the English north. Evangeline is relatively young among
the parishes of Louisiana, having been carved from the western
portion of St. Landry in 1910. It is named for Evangeline, the
heroine of Longfellow's epic poem about the exile of the Acadians,
many of whose descendants reside in Louisiana. Today, the people of
Evangeline Parish remain close to the land, earning their
livelihood from agriculture and forestry or small businesses. From
outdoor recreation at Chicot State Park to the Courir de Mardi Gras
in Mamou and Basile, and all the festivals in between, they know
how to pass a good time.
In 1850, commercial whaling ships entered the Bering Sea for the
first time. There, they found the summer grounds of bowhead whales,
as well as local Inuit people who had been whaling the Alaskan
coast for 2,000 years. Within a few years, almost the entire
Pacific fleet came north each June to find a path through the
melting ice, and the Inuit way of whaling--in fact, their entire
livelihood--would be forever changed. Baleen was worth nearly $5 a
pound. But the new trading posts brought guns, alcohol, and
disease. In 1905, a new type of whaling using modern steel
whale-catchers and harpoon cannons appeared along the Alaskan
coast. Yet the Inuit and Inupiat continue whaling today from
approximately 15 small towns scattered along the Arctic Ocean and
the Bering Strait. Whaling for these people is a life-or-death
proposition in a land considered uninhabitable by many, for without
the whale, whole villages probably could not survive as they have
for centuries.
Lakewood was a vibrant community long before it incorporated in
1996, though cityhood helped give the area one name and identity.
In the mid-19th century, Lakewood was the site of British farms and
the first US military base in Washington Territory. Men who became
famous in the Civil War, such as George Pickett, served there.
Native American leader Leschi, the victim of "judicial lynching" by
civilians, spent his last days there. As Lakewood became a retreat
for Puget Sound's rich and famous, names such as Carman and
Alexander--as famous in their day as the name Weyerhaeuser was and
is--settled here, leaving behind reminders like Lakewold Gardens.
One of Lakewood's most famous residents was Ivan, a captive gorilla
who captured the hearts of animal lovers worldwide.
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Wetumpka
(Paperback)
Jan Wood, Joe Allen Turner
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R561
R515
Discovery Miles 5 150
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Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne, seeking to create a strategic outpost for
New France, built Fort Toulouse in Creek territory. This area would
eventually become Wetumpka, located on the banks of the Coosa River
and standing at the foot of the Appalachian Mountains. The fort
became the headquarters for Gen. Andrew Jackson during the War of
1812, and later it was where Creek Indians ceded their lands to the
federal government. Wetumpka's presence was also large outside of
military endeavors. During the cotton boom, two years after the
city's incorporation in 1834, a New York newspaper declared it and
Chicago, Illinois, the "two most promising cities in the West."
Although fire, floods, and the Civil War hindered growth,
infrastructural transformations and cultural additions have helped
mold modern Wetumpka into the "City of Natural Beauty" and propel
it to occasional roles on the big screen.
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Rock County
(Paperback)
Rock County Historical Society
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R560
R514
Discovery Miles 5 140
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Rock County, located in the southwest corner of Minnesota, is proud
to share its history through a pictorial journey of settlement,
growth, and development. The county is, and has always been, an
agricultural community. One of its outstanding features is the
Sioux Quartzite cliff line visible to settlers who moved in or came
through the area as well as today's residents and visitors. The
cliff line is 120 feet high and stretches for about two miles. It
was formed through the early glacier period and travels northwest
through Rock County, past the South Dakota border, before going
back underground. The rock was quarried and used in many of the
homes and businesses in Luverne and other Rock County communities.
When the Marquis de Lafayette came to Fredonia in 1825, he found
the village illuminated by natural gas--the first such community in
the world. While most Americans relied on candles for illumination,
early settlers near Fredonia noticed bubbles that could be lighted
rising from the bed of the Canadaway Creek and developed technology
to collect enough to light the village. Another man, Dr. Francis
Brewer, realized that the thick black substance could be converted
to lamp oil, and it was suggested that if enough could be found, it
could provide an inexpensive way to light the world. Join local
author Douglas Houck as he tells the story of the first commercial
developments of natural gas and petroleum products in the
nineteenth century.
In the heart of central Kentucky Bluegrass country, Lexington
boasts a long, proud history reaching far back before this "Horse
Capital of the World" reared its first thoroughbred. Early
Lexingtonians built an intellectual and economic center from their
frontier outpost and quickly claimed the first college, newspaper,
and millionaire west of the Alleghenies -- among many other firsts.
Mount Juliet was born on the headwaters of Stoner's (Lick) Creek,
which was named after 18th-century long hunter Michael Stoner. The
small agrarian community had a handful of families who raised
cattle and were dedicated to digging into the rocky soil, planting
crops to make ends meet. Plans moved full-steam ahead for the
Nashville, Chattanooga, and St. Louis Railroad. God-fearing country
folks filled churches, while others lifted their spirits at Eagle
Tavern. Some historians say the city's moniker derived from a manor
in County Kilkenny, Ireland. As time progressed, images of the
bucolic setting faded, and a modern-day frontier of infrastructure
took shape. Adjacent to Nashville, the country music capital, Mount
Juliet was in a prime position for growth. The city became home for
producing pioneer Owen Bradley, who helped make Patsy Cline and
Loretta Lynn legendary entertainers, and country icon Charlie
Daniels. The "City Between the Lakes" is now one of the state's
fastest growing communities, boasting nearly 400 new houses each
year and a new business permit every two days.
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Evans
(Paperback)
Sarah Arnusch
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R561
R515
Discovery Miles 5 150
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