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West Chester, a picturesque Pennsylvania town and Chester County
seat, has retained all the charm of more than two centuries of
existence. This book is the perfect companion while strolling
through its streets on a beautiful day. Text uncovers the history
of significant sites, and accompanying photographs make the town
come to life. Six tours reveal over 75 sites in 150 stunning color
photographs. Maps for each tour help readers navigate this
southeastern Pennsylvania town. Residents and visitors alike will
cherish this volume, which is the perfect memento for lovers of
history, architecture, and small-town living.
J. Howard Wert was a recent college graduate when the armies of the
North and South converged near his family's homestead just three
miles outside Gettysburg in the summer of 1863. A militia member
and anti-slavery supporter, Wert acted as a guide for Union General
George Meade, helping position federal troops in the fields and
hills around town. Perhaps more importantly, he collected and
labeled artifacts from the battle, including a still-hot
Confederate shell that almost hit him near Little Round Top. After
the war, Wert resumed gathering relics of the three-day battle,
many given to him by veterans of both sides, including weapons,
clothing, letters, furniture, and even items related to Lincoln's
Address. Now this amazing private collection can be appreciated
through more than 120 color pictures and informative text about
both the items and Wert's life.
Pickett s Charge was the last best chance for a Confederate victory
in the Civil War and came during the final day s fighting at
Gettysburg, July 3, 1863. While Confederate General Robert E. Lee s
greatest gamble has been told and retold, the heroic stand of the
Union forces has received scant attention. Released during this
150th anniversary of the epic battle of Gettysburg, Pickett s
Charge: The Untold Story tells the story of the heroic defenders of
the Union and especially the Philadelphia Brigade and its commander
General Alexander Webb. Webb won a Congressional Medal of Honor for
his valor that afternoon and later became President of the City
College of New York. With the outcome of the Civil War in the
balance, Webb and his fellow soldiers stopped the Confederates at a
spot known as the High Water Mark of the Confederacy and saved the
Union.
The sniper killings of Kennett Square, Pennsylvania, policemen
William Davis and Richard Posey shocked the American public in
November 1972 and garnered national coverage on the major news
networks at the time. Fifty years later, this book, the first to
cover the slayings, details the cold-blooded ambush of the two
small-town law enforcement officers by a member of the murderous
Johnston gang. Using a high-powered rifle from a sniper's nest,
Johnston gang member Ancell Hamm gunned down the officers in the
early morning hours of 15 November 1972, just outside the town's
police station. Using period, local reportage and new interviews
with law enforcement officials who worked the case, the meticulous
investigation of the crime by members of the Pennsylvania State
Police, FBI, Chester County detectives, and local police
departments is recounted in detail, as is the trial. The book also
details the lives of the victims, and the loss suffered by their
families in this small south-eastern Pennsylvania town. The
foreword was written by former Pennsylvania Supreme Court justice
William H. Lamb, who, as Chester County district attorney in the
early 1970s, prosecuted the case. The book also includes new
interviews with the convicted killer.
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