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Verses (Hardcover)
T. Arthur Bailey
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R864
Discovery Miles 8 640
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone
This unique study of a generation of Tennessee soldiers contrasts
in detail the lifestyles and class attitudes of the
nineteenth-century South. Bailey has gleaned a vast amount of
information on landownership and slaveownership, occupations,
wealth, education, social-class relationships, Civil War
experiences, and post-bellum careers. He argues that class
differences and conflict were stronger that suggested by earlier
scholars.
Originally published in 1987.
A UNC Press Enduring Edition -- UNC Press Enduring Editions use the
latest in digital technology to make available again books from our
distinguished backlist that were previously out of print. These
editions are published unaltered from the original, and are
presented in affordable paperback formats, bringing readers both
historical and cultural value.
Fintry - Lives, Loves and Dreams chronicles the memorable people,
the secret loves and the engaging history of the Shorts' Creek
delta. Containing visitor maps, photographs and interesting
anecdoates, this readable account covers Fintry from pre-history to
the present. It follows a trail of dreams through Fintry's
incarnations as an enigmatic millionaire's private estate and
school for orphans, to the grand plans for an international resort.
Media reviews Millennium book project captures Fintry's history
from the Capital News (Kelowna), Wednesday October 11, 2000
(A18-A19)
by Judy Steeves, Staff Reporter
A verdant delta of flat land created by the rushing waters of a
little creek has acted as a magnet over the decades, attracting
stubborn people with dreams that inevitably are smashed before they
leave.
Fintry, a 360-hectare plot of Westside lakeshore, waterfall,
canyon and upland wilderness, was purchased in 1995 by the Central
Okanagan Regional District and province as parkland for $7.68
million.
Public ownership was the culmination of nearly two centuries of a
parade of white men's private visions for this isolated point of
land jutting into Okanagan Lake, following an unknown length of
time when it was part of the domain of the Native people.
It oozes history.
So it's no wonder that Westbank author and freelance writer [Stan]
Sauerwein and Fintry resident [Arthur] Bailey chose to collaborate
on a chronicling of some of the characters who made their mark on
the province, the valley and Fintry in particular over the past few
decades.
It was published with the partial financing support of the Canada
Millennium Partnership Program and private donations. Aportion of
the revenue from each copy sold goes to the Central Okanagan
Heritage Society to assist in ongoing restoration projects.
The property and the ghosts of the people who've populated it are
fascinating enough, but Sauerwein has woven the stories of their
lives, loves and dreams into an even more compelling tale, at the
centre of which is just a simple little parcel of land.
It initially was visited by fur traders in the early 1800s as they
traversed what was originally a trail used by the Okanagan Native
people on the west side of Okanagan Lake and styed at the delta at
Shorts' Creek. It became part of the Okanagan Fur Brigade Trail, a
route for transporting trade goods and furs from Northern B.C. to
the Pacific Ocean at the mouth of the Columbia River.
Gold miners followed, and eventually Thomas Dorling Shorts took
out the first pre-emption on Fintry in 1883, 129 ha at the mouth of
what was then called Biche Creek.
That began what turned out to be an extremely colourful century of
life on the delta.
From Captain Shorts, renowned for the unusual and often unsafe
contraptions with which he ferried people and supplies up and down
Okanagan Lake with irregularity, the delta was purchased by a pair
of "sporting dilettantes" with British titles.
However, the most memorable mark on Fintry was made some 20 years
later when a wealthy Scot named James Cameron Dun-Waters purchased
the spit of land, turning it into an estate for growing some of the
valley's first fruit, Ayrshire dairy cattle and as a base for
hunting expeditions.
The granite manor house, inventive irrigation system and unique
octagonal dairy barn he built remain today as part of the new park,
remnants of this valley's history.
Sauerwein, with the help of Bailey, has also chronicled in
fascinating detail, Fintry's tangled but sometimes glittering
history as a pawn in the game of real estate development and in the
entertainment industry.
**********
Fintry's colourful history now in black and white from the Westside
Weekly (Okanagan Valley), Wednesday September 27, 2000
by Dorothy Brotherton
Stan Sauerwein feels a novel brewing. The colourful lives he's
written about in his latest non-fiction book beg for a romantic
treatment.
"There's a good novel, a fine romance, in some of these stories,"
said Sauerwein.
That may come next. For now, the book he has completed is called
Fintry: Lives, Loves and Dreams. It chronicles the history of a
spit of land that juts into Okanagan Lake midway between Kelowna
and Vernon.
It is the first area history that pulls together all the bits and
pieces of accounts written over the past century or so, and weaves
them into a chronological whole.
First Nations' chiefs, lords, premiers, prospectors, the idle rich
and the humble poor, visionaries and speculators, stubborn pioneer
women and eccentric pioneer men - all have had a part in taming the
Shorts' Creek Delta, on which Fintry is formed.
Or is it tamed? Under Sauerwein's pen the land itself becomes the
most colourful character. It defies civilizing. It lures an
enigmatic millionaire and a school for orphans, it hosts a trail of
dreams. It spurns plans for everything from a hunting lodge to an
international resort, until it reaches its current status as a B.C.
park.
Sauerwein spent a year writing the book. He has fun with the
character of Thomas Shorts, High Admiral of the Okanagan, who tries
to sell Fintry for $75, after convinced it could only grow
cabbages, but he can't find a buyer. A short time later he is
offered $4,0000 for it.
Sauerwein has fun exploding some of the myths surrounding the
Laird of Fintry, James Dun-Waters and speculating about why he
apparently did not marry the love of his life.
But Sauerwein has the most fun on a "hectic trip to Scotland to
track down and verify some stories, to follow the steps of
Dun-Waters when he went back to Scotland."
"Katie is so fascinating. She stuck by him," says Sauerwein,
smiling obliquely, as if he knows or suspects more to Dun-Waters'
friendship with Catherine Stuart than records reveal.
But again the land obscures the people. Sauerwein jumps into his
own narrative about Stuart to say, "So many firsts happened at
Fintry - telephone, power, Ayrshire cattle, a curling rink - the
province actually started up the strata title act as a result of
Fintry."
Referring to attempts by the Bailey and Graham families to turn
Fintry into an international resort, Sauerwein says, "It was as if
Fintry would not have it.
"It seems fitting that it's become a park - this special little
place in the valley will be enjoyed by my children and children's
children."
Sauerwein poured over journals, historic records, military
archives, government documents and interviewed people who remember
some of the Fintry pioneers. The book is heavy with annotation, and
reads like a lively history.
He says it's not a textbook, not scholarly, but it is history and
probably as close as a person can get to what actually happened in
those bygone days.
William Edward Dodd rose from an impoverished background to
become one of the early twentieth century's more distinguished
southern historians. While many southern intellectuals of his time
denied the existence of class conflict, Dodd made it his life's
theme and was unique in using history as a means of criticizing the
injustices of the class system. In "William Edward Dodd: The
South's Yeoman Scholar, "Fred Arthur Bailey offers a much-needed
biography that encompasses the full scope of Dodd's career from
political activist to presidential confidant to American ambassador
in Hitler's Germany. Dodd remained throughout his career not only a
radical proponent of democracy but also a strident critic of those
he marked as its enemies; he savaged southern aristocrats, northern
industrialists, and German Nazis alike. This biography explores the
development of William Edward Dodd's rebellious intellect and is
the first to appreciate fully the context in which his views were
formed. Dodd was a major figure in his discipline and a pioneer who
insisted history and its interpretations did not belong merely to
the elite.
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