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Books > Humanities > History
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Wawa
(Paperback)
Maria M Thompson, Donald H Price; Foreword by Richard D. Wood Jr
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R556
R510
Discovery Miles 5 100
Save R46 (8%)
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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Wawa has more than two hundred years of history in American
business. Founded in 1803 and incorporated in 1865, Wawa has roots
in the manufacture of cast-iron water pipes and decorative
lampposts. Using the resources and surplus water power from the
iron business, the family opened a cotton mill and began producing
cotton piece goods, including Red Star diapers. The first Wawa milk
plant opened in 1902; by the late 1950s, the Wawa Dairy had
expanded its home delivery business to include over one hundred
forty-five routes. The first Wawa Food Market opened on April 16,
1964. Today, the company is familiar to many as a chain of five
hundred forty convenience stores in Pennsylvania, New Jersey,
Delaware, Maryland, and Virginia that offers a wide selection of
fresh foods, coffee, and gasoline. Wawa contains vintage images
documenting the evolution of the company as it adapted to changing
economic and social conditions. From the early days of iron
manufacture to the opening of the first store in Folsom,
Pennsylvania, Wawa brings to life the many facets of one of
America's top privately owned companies.
For over three hundred years, stories of witches, sea serpents and
pirates have amazed and terrified residents of Massachusetts's
North Shore. In the summer of 1692, phantom men were spotted in the
fields of Gloucester. Farther north, "A" marks the spot for pirate
treasure in the marshes of Newbury, while to the east, full moons
might bring out the werewolf of Dogtown. The devil himself has
burned his mark on the boulder-strewn landscape, while shaggy
humanoids have been sighted loping along the coast. From Boston to
New Hampshire, Massachusetts's North Shore is filled with
remarkable stories and legendary characters. Join author Peter
Muise and discover the North Shore's uncanny legends and tales of
the paranormal.
From the Great Game to the present, an international cultural and
political biography of one of our most evocative, compelling, and
poorly understood narratives of history. The Silk Road is rapidly
becoming one of the key geocultural and geostrategic concepts of
the twenty-first century. Yet, for much of the twentieth century
the Silk Road received little attention, overshadowed by
nationalism and its invented pasts, and a world dominated by
conflict and Cold War standoffs. In The Silk Road, Tim Winter
reveals the different paths this history of connected cultures took
towards global fame, a century after the first evidence of contact
between China and Europe was unearthed. He also reveals how this
remarkably popular depiction of the past took hold as a platform
for geopolitical ambition, a celebration of peace and cosmopolitan
harmony, and created dreams of exploration and grand adventure.
Winter further explores themes that reappear today as China seeks
to revive the Silk Roads for the twenty-first century. Known across
the globe, the Silk Road is a concept fit for the modern world, and
yet its significance and origins remain poorly understood and are
the subject of much confusion. Pathbreaking in its analysis, this
book presents an entirely new reading of this increasingly
important concept, one that is likely to remain at the center of
world affairs for decades to come.
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