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Friedrichsburg - A Novel
Friedrich Armand Strubberg; Translated by James C. Kearney
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R654
R600
Discovery Miles 6 000
Save R54 (8%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Summerfield G. Roberts Award for a Work of Creative Writing, Sons
of the Texas Republic, 2013 First published in Germany in 1867,
this fascinating autobiographical novel of German immigrants on the
antebellum Texas frontier provides a trove of revelations about the
myriad communities that once called the Hill Country home. Founded
in 1846, Fredericksburg, Texas, was established by German noblemen
who enticed thousands of their compatriots to flee their
overcrowded homeland with the prospect of free land in a place that
was portrayed as a new Garden of Eden. Few of the settlers,
however, were prepared for the harsh realities of the Texas
frontier or for confrontation with the Comanche. In his 1867 novel
Friedrichsburg, Friedrich Armand Strubberg, a.k.a. Dr. Schubbert,
interwove his personal story with a fictional romance to capture
the flavor of Fredericksburg, Texas, during its founding years when
he served as the first colonial director. Now available in a
contemporary translation, Friedrichsburg brings to life the
little-known aspects of life among these determined but often
ill-equipped settlers who sought to make the transition to a new
home and community on the Texas frontier. Opening just as a peace
treaty is being negotiated between the German newcomers and the
Comanches, the novel describes the unlikely survival of these
fledgling homesteads and provides evidence that support from the
Delaware Indians, as well as the nearby Mormon community of Zodiac,
was key to the Germans’ success. Along the way, Strubberg also
depicts the laying of the cornerstone to the Vereinskirche, the
blazing of an important new road to Austin, exciting hunting
scenes, and an admirable spirit of cultural cohesion and determined
resilience. In so doing, he resurrects a fascinating lost world.
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Journey to Texas, 1833 (Paperback)
Detlef Dunt; Translated by Anders Saustrup; Edited by James C. Kearney, Geir Bentzen
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R528
R486
Discovery Miles 4 860
Save R42 (8%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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In 1834, a German immigrant to Texas, D. T. F. (Detlef Thomas
Friedrich) Jordt, aka Detlef Dunt, published Reise nach Texas, a
delightful little book that praised Texas as "a land which puts
riches in [the immigrant's] lap, which can bring happiness to
thousands and to their descendants." Dunt's volume was the first
one written by an on-the-ground observer to encourage German
immigration to Texas, and it provides an unparalleled portrait of
Austin's Colony from the lower Brazos region and San Felipe to the
Industry and Frelsburg areas, where Dunt resided with Friedrich
Ernst and his family. Journey to Texas, 1833 offers the first
English translation of Reise nach Texas. It brings to vivid life
the personalities, scenic landscapes, and customs that Dunt
encountered in colonial Texas on the eve of revolution, along with
his many practical suggestions for Germans who intended to
emigrate. The editors' introduction describes the social,
political, and economic conditions that prompted Europeans to
emigrate to Texas and provides biographical background on Dunt and
his connection with Friedrich Ernst. Also included in the volume
are a bibliography of German works about Texas and an interpretive
essay discussing all of the early German literature about Texas and
Dunt's place within it. Expanding our knowledge of German
immigration to Texas beyond the more fully documented Hill Country
communities, Journey to Texas, 1833 also adds an important chapter
to the story of pre-Revolutionary Texas by a sophisticated
commentator.
The Forty-Eighters of Possum Creek: A Texas Civil War Story is a
departure for State House Press. This remarkable work of vintage
historical fiction focuses on the life of one young man, Kuno
Sartorius, who grows up and comes of age in a community of educated
German immigrants during the waning months of the Civil War. Author
William Trenckmann serialized the novel in his newspaper, Das
Bellville Wochenblatt [The Bellville Weekly]. His novel, Die
Lateiner am Possum Creek is one of the few works of fiction to
treat the plight of the minority Texas Germans during the
war.However, it is more than a German story, and provides vignettes
of all aspects of life, and of all classes in Texas, on both the
home front and the Trans-Mississippi theater. Throughout are the
young men from all walks of life brought together by Confederate
conscription and facing the same hardships of war. Expertly
translated and annotated by James C. Kearney, this novel becomes a
shadow memoir of the American Civil War. The educated German
settlers of Millheim had fled their native land because of strife
and revolution, choosing the bucolic life on the Texas frontier
over the sophisticated university towns of Germany. Their children,
though, faced uncertainties of their own as Texas seceded and
joined the Confederacy and depended on all military aged men to do
their part in a cause few Germans in the neighborhood cared for,
and to perpetuate slavery which most abhorred. Kearney's notes help
the reader navigate the story, and reveal the 'story behind the
story.'
Despite all that has been written about Vietnam, the story of the
1-A-O conscientious objector, who agreed to put on a uni-form and
serve in the field without weapons rather than accept alternative
service outside the military, has received scarce atten-tion. This
joint memoir by two 1-A-O combat medics, James C. Kearney and
William H. Clamurro, represents a unique approach to the
subject. It is a blend of their personal narratives—with
select Vietnam poems by Clamurro—to illustrate noncombatant
objection as a unique and relatively unknown form of Vietnam War
protest. Both men initially met during training and then served as
frontline medics in separate units “outside the wire” in
Vietnam. Clamurro was assigned to a tank company in Tay Ninh
province next to the Cambodian border, before reassignment to an
aid station with the 1st Air Cavalry. Kearney served first as a
medic with an artillery battery in the 1st Infantry Division, then
as a convoy medic during the Cambodian invasion with the 25th
Infantry Division, and finally as a Medevac medic with the 1st Air
Cavalry. In this capacity Kearney was seriously wounded during a
“hot hoist” in February 1971 and ended up being treated by his
friend Clamurro back at base. Because of their status as “a new
breed of conscientious objector”—i.e., more political than
religious in their convictions—the authors’ experience of the
Vietnam War differed fundamentally from that of their fellow
draftees and contrasted even with the great majority of their
fellow 1-A-O medics, whose conscientious objector status was
largely or entirely faith-based.
The Stafford-Townsend feud began with an 1871 shootout in Columbus,
Texas, followed by the deaths of the Stafford brothers in 1890. The
second phase blossomed after 1898 with the assassination of Larkin
Hope, and concluded in 1911 with the violent deaths of Marion Hope,
Jim Townsend, and Will Clements, all in the space of one month.
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