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Books > Sport & Leisure > Travel & holiday
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History of a Trip to the Great Saginaw Valley, June, 1871, by Invitation of the Fort Wayne, Muncie, and Cincinnati Railroad, and With the Co-Operation of the Bee Line, Fort Wayne, Jackson and Saginaw, and Jackson, Lansing and Saginaw Railroad Companies
(Paperback)
Laura Ream
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R376
Discovery Miles 3 760
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Richmond
(Paperback)
Cheri Housley, Marie Lundgreen, Kathy Jones
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R559
R513
Discovery Miles 5 130
Save R46 (8%)
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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In the fall of 1859, Agrippa Cooper made camp with five other
families at Brower Springs in the Cache Valley. The following
autumn brought 20 more families to the area--including John Bair,
William H. Lewis, Francis Stewart, and Robert D. Petty, and thus
the town of Richmond began to grow. It is a common belief that
Richmond was named in honor of Charles C. Rich, an LDS Church
apostle. Throughout the early 1900s, Richmond thrived as a hub of
commerce and industry, with the population reaching almost 5,000.
Today, Richmond takes pride in its agricultural roots and
celebrates the longest-running Holstein dairy show west of the
Mississippi River with the Black and White Days.
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Riceville
(Paperback)
Anne E. Chesky
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R559
R513
Discovery Miles 5 130
Save R46 (8%)
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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Bull Creek Valley was traditionally a hunting ground and, possibly,
a temporary settlement for ancestors of the Cherokee. Before the
turn of the 19th century, however, it became known as Riceville
after the first white settler, Joseph Marion Rice, and his wife,
Margaret, built the area's first homestead. Rice, well known for
allegedly shooting the area's last buffalo in 1799, put Riceville
on the map by opening a stock stand for drovers bringing their
animals over the mountain to sell in South Carolina markets. After
Rice arrived, more families began to settle in this beautiful
valley; their names describe current locations, such as Jones Cove,
Shope Creek, Dillingham Circle, Reed Road, and Parker Road.
Riceville soon became the center of a thriving community with two
schools, several churches, a handful of stores, and two post
offices. Today, Riceville is known for its natural beauty--large
rolling expanses of farmland and undeveloped tracts of forest.
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Montgomery Village
(Paperback)
Montgomery Village Historical Book Committee
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R559
R513
Discovery Miles 5 130
Save R46 (8%)
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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In the early 1960s, architect and visionary Clarence Kettler and
his brothers, Milton and Charles, dreamed of building a unique new
town modeled after a European planned community. This town would be
family oriented and would emphasize recreation with open space and
a sense of community. With careful planning, their vision, which
included schools, places of worship, a golf course, shopping areas,
and recreational amenities, was realized--Montgomery Village. Over
time, as the Village grew, farms were replaced by well-manicured
residential areas and mature trees. Each community adheres to
architectural standards and community covenants set by the
developers to help maintain continuity and home values. Today, more
than 40,000 people call Montgomery Village home. Montgomery Village
takes pride in its active volunteers, parks, and recreational
facilities and its commitment to maintain and enhance the natural
environment and coexist with our many species of wildlife. Though
no longer a new town, the Village continues to serve as an
admirable and viable model for communities everywhere. The year
2011 marks Montgomery Village's 45th anniversary.
Travel alongside historian Cliff Caldwell as he uncovers tales of
true Texas grit, all within a day's ride of Mountain Home. Rough
characters were plentiful in Kerr County after the Civil War. In
fact, no fewer than three thousand of these outlaws were reportedly
brought to justice in this same area before the end of the
nineteenth century. While Native Americans fought for their ground,
notorious gunmen like John Wesley Hardin and Frank Eastwood gained
ill-deserved riches or met their fates at the hands of legendary
rangers like N.O. Reynolds and Thalis T. Cook. Meet the dastardly
yet lesser-known individuals like "Gip" Hardin, a teacher whose
drunken night out turned into a gunfight outside Junction City's
Turman Hotel, and the Ake brothers, two of the only members of the
Eastwood Gang to be set free.
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Travels Through Holland, Flanders, Germany, Denmark, Sweden, Lapland, Russia, the Ukraine, and Poland, in the Years 1768, 1769, and 1770
- in Which Is Particularly Minuted, the Present State of Those Countries, Respecting Their Agriculture, Population, Man
(Paperback)
Joseph Marshall
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R572
Discovery Miles 5 720
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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