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Mystic (Hardcover)
Kent Fuller, Meredith Fuller, Lisa Saunders
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R770
R641
Discovery Miles 6 410
Save R129 (17%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Most accounts of Amelia Earhart's life barely mention her wedding,
except to say she got married-reluctantly. The 2009 movie Amelia,
starring Hilary Swank, shows her getting married outside, despite
the early February date. Excerpt from Amelia Earhart Was Married
Here: Mary Anderson, Curator of the Noank Historical Society,
confirmed what my breakfast companion Barbara told me-that Earhart
was secretly married in a simple civil ceremony in the square,
flat-roofed house I found on Church Street. Learning I was
including this information in a book about the area, Mary said, You
tell everybody that the wedding scene portrayed in the movie
Amelia] is inaccurate. My husband's grandfather, the Groton probate
judge, performed the ceremony, and my father-in-law, Robert
Anderson, a young Noank lawyer at the time, attended as a witness.
When the judge congratulated her after the ceremony, calling her
Mrs. Putnam, she replied, 'Please sir, I prefer Miss Earhart.'
Note: This booklet, Amelia Earhart Was Married Here, is an excerpt
from the book, Mystic Seafarer's Trail. If you already purchased
the Mystic Seafarer's Trail, you do not need to purchase Amelia
Earhart Was Married Here.
Henry Gale responded to Paul Revere's call to Lexington and was
honored as a patriot. Yet a decade later, he was considered a
traitor for his leadership role in Shays' Rebellion-a movement to
stop courts from prosecuting and jailing the many Revolutionary War
veterans unable to pay their debts in the post-war credit crisis.
After a military conflict between the insurgents and the militia,
Henry Gale was arrested, found guilty of treason and sentenced to
"be hanged by the neck until he be dead." Marched up to the
scaffold, the gathered crowd watched as the noose was placed around
his neck and prayers were said. Moments before this father of young
children was to be dropped from the land of the living, the sheriff
pulled out a piece of paper and read a statement from Governor John
Hancock. This dramatic account was first published in the Daughters
of the American Revolution magazine, American Spirit (March/April
2008).
When people think of Mystic, Connecticut, they think of Mystic
Pizza. Yet when they visit this quaint seacoast village, they find
a lot more than pizza National Geographic named Mystic one of the
top "100 Adventure Towns" in the U.S. Mystic Seafarer's Trail is a
historical--and sometimes hysterical--adventure book, which
includes little known facts behind Mystic's pizza, Amelia Earhart's
wedding, hurricanes, cemeteries and massacre, plus information on
area shipwrecks, Benedict Arnold's treachery and Ernie the Ledge
Light Ghost. Summary: While searching for the "7 Wonders of Mystic"
with her beagle/basset hound, author Lisa Saunders uncovers the
secrets behind the Titanic's shoes, Captain Sisson's hunt for gold
and Amelia Earhart's wedding. But will she ever find an adventure
of her own? One that will make her thin and famous? Then it
happens: when walking the Mystic Seafarer's Trail (which Lisa
designed for those who don't like to go uphill), she meets a blind
sailor who invites her on a long, winter voyage. Can this
landlubber defy squalls, scurvy, and her fear of scraping barnacles
to survive this epic journey? Excerpt Chapter 1: Shortly after
stepping out of my new home with my hound for our first stroll
through the historic seacoast village of Mystic, a woman pulled
over in her van and yelled, "Excuse me." Assuming she was a tourist
wanting directions to Mystic Pizza or some other attraction, I
wasn't prepared for what she really wanted to know. "Do you realize
the back of your skirt is tucked into your underwear?" What a debut
in my new hometown-I don't think this is what National Geographic
meant when they named Mystic one of the top 100 adventure towns in
the U.S...
A test of young courage. Lisa is a chubby city girl searching for
friendship and excitement. She leaves home, and the elevators and
bullies of a big apartment complex, to spend a summer in the
country at her grandparents' farm. Culture shock Accompanied only
by her loyal beagle, Donald Dog, Lisa faces a summer in a very
different environment with its own challenges and dangers. Using an
outhouse is the least of her problems She is terrified of her new
pony. Lisa's grandfather is injured by a charging cow and needs her
to ride the pony to get help. Remembering Grandma's lesson about
how love overcomes fear, she tries to push past her worries to ride
alone and obtain the help her grandfather needs. Book includes
Study Guide, Workshop for Aspiring Writers, and sample horse facts
and worksheets from Cornell University's "Horse Book in a Bucket"
Program.
The transcribed letters of Charles McDowell and his wife, Nancy,
display remarkable devotion, and offer readers a unique perspective
of the Civil War. These letters contain little known details about:
hangings, prostitution, amputations, desertions, theft and murder
among Union troops. Charles also describes personal contacts with
Lincoln and Seward (of "Seward's Alaskan Folly"); battles of Cold
Harbor, Jerusalem Plank Road, Monocacy, Opequon, Fisher's Hill,
Cedar Creek; the Siege of Petersburg; Mosby's Men; and the
Shenandoah Valley and Appomattox Campaign. The Ninth Heavy
Artillery was a part of the Sixth Corps. This story is cohesive and
informative yet charming and romantic in a very personal way.
Vintage photographs enhance the text.
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