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Dr. Johnson moves beyond the existing literature on rural-urban
population shifts during the past forty years to examine the
effects of those shifts on the business infrastructure that
supplies goods and services to rural areas in the United States.
First establishing a historical demographic context to serve as a
backdrop, he provides a detailed longitudinal treatment on the
linkage between population change and the rural commercial
infrastructure, as well as timely information on the impact of the
recent rural population turnaround on business. Some of his
findings, based on the latest data available, refute earlier
expectations that a decrease in population necessarily leads to a
decline in the local business community.
Dr. Johnson moves beyond the existing literature on rural-urban
population shifts during the past forty years to examine the
effects of those shifts on the business infrastructure that
supplies goods and services to rural areas in the United States.
First establishing a historical demographic context to serve as a
backdrop, he provides a detailed longitudinal treatment on the
linkage between population change and the rural commercial
infrastructure, as well as timely information on the impact of the
recent rural population turnaround on business. Some of his
findings, based on the latest data available, refute earlier
expectations that a decrease in population necessarily leads to a
decline in the local business community.
This Is A New Release Of The Original 1894 Edition.
1894. Adventures of a Forty-Niner was written by Dr. Daniel Knower
who sailed for California in 1849 armed with a letter of
introduction from his cousin's husband, William L. Marcy, and
twelve prefabricated frame houses he intended to sell in San
Francisco. The book describes his business and real estate
speculations in San Francisco; the city's gambling dens, their
mountebanks and blackguards, and its politics on the eve of the
Civil War. He provides a glimpse of life at a mining camp near
Coloma and the dusty violence of a bullfight. He got into the
shipping business and traveled as far inland as Stockton with a
cargo of house frames.
1894. Adventures of a Forty-Niner was written by Dr. Daniel Knower
who sailed for California in 1849 armed with a letter of
introduction from his cousin's husband, William L. Marcy, and
twelve prefabricated frame houses he intended to sell in San
Francisco. The book describes his business and real estate
speculations in San Francisco; the city's gambling dens, their
mountebanks and blackguards, and its politics on the eve of the
Civil War. He provides a glimpse of life at a mining camp near
Coloma and the dusty violence of a bullfight. He got into the
shipping business and traveled as far inland as Stockton with a
cargo of house frames.
1894. Adventures of a Forty-Niner was written by Dr. Daniel Knower
who sailed for California in 1849 armed with a letter of
introduction from his cousin's husband, William L. Marcy, and
twelve prefabricated frame houses he intended to sell in San
Francisco. The book describes his business and real estate
speculations in San Francisco; the city's gambling dens, their
mountebanks and blackguards, and its politics on the eve of the
Civil War. He provides a glimpse of life at a mining camp near
Coloma and the dusty violence of a bullfight. He got into the
shipping business and traveled as far inland as Stockton with a
cargo of house frames.
Anyone involved in a leadership role encounters the need for
prayers that can be used as written or can be adapted. This
collection is intended to widen horizons, spark imagination, expand
language and enrich personal encounter through prayer. A subject
index is included.
The Johnson Family Singers, a gospel group from North Carolina,
rose to national acclaim during the 1940s and 1950s. This memoir
was written by one of the three sons who sang with them. It focuses
not only upon family singers that became famous on popular radio
but also upon American gospel music. Although neglected by scholars
and historians, it is loved by aficionados and is cherished by many
devoted Christians everywhere. Here, in a frank, objective
narrative Kenneth M. Johnson looks back on his singing days and
details both the successes and struggles the Johnsons experienced
during the years when their stirring music filled the air. He
discusses what occurred behind the scenes and on the road to
stardom. He tells how children who grew up in a singing family
managed school life and how they balanced their social development
with entertainment schedules. He gives details of the stresses that
fame placed on family life, especially on his parents' troubled
marriage, and of their survival through their love of gospel song.
He speaks of humble beginnings, of the illegitimacy of family
members, of legal problems, and of the heart-felt hymns that
propelled the Johnsons onward and were their mainstay. On many
Sabbaths CBS radio broadcast their program. Listeners getting ready
for services were likely to hear the familiar litany: "Each Sunday
morning at this time Columbia presents fifteen minutes of hymns and
sacred songs with the Johnson Family Singers... a father, mother,
and four children. Southern-born, steeped in the tradition of the
Deep South, the Johnson Family Singers bring to the well-beloved,
familiar songs of Christian people everywhere a sweetness and
simplicity of interpretation." Told with remarkable candor, We Sang
for Our Supper recounts the public and the private life of the
gospel group touted on the airwaves as "one of America's foremost
singing families."
Kenneth M. Johnson is a retired United Methodist clergyman
living at Lake Junaluska, North Carolina.
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