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book (3)


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Grass widow
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ISBN: 081738202X 9780817382025 081735090X 9780817350901 Year: 2004 Publisher: Tuscaloosa University of Alabama Press

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An engaging account of one woman's overcoming the Depression and small town mores. Viola Goode Liddell's short memoir tells the story of her return to Alabama in search of a husband and a new life. Thirty years old and recently divorced, Liddell comes back to her home state-with her young son-determined to survive, during the depths of the Depression. Liddell narrates the obstacles she faces as a single mother in the 1930's Deep South with self-deprecating humor and a confessional tone that reveal both her intelligence and her unapologetic ambitions.


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The Carolina backcountry venture
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ISBN: 1611177456 9781611177459 9781611177442 1611177448 Year: 2017 Publisher: Columbia, South Carolina

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"The Carolina backcountry venture is a historical, geographical, and archaeological investigation of the development of Camden, South Carolina, and the Wateree River Valley during the second half of the eighteenth century. The result of extensive field and archival work by author Kenneth E. Lewis, this publication examines the economic and social processes responsible for change and documents the importance of those individuals who played significant roles in determining the success of colonization and the form it took"-- Provided by publisher.


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Branch line empires
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ISBN: 0253029910 9780253029911 9780253029584 Year: 2017 Publisher: Bloomington, Indiana

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The Pennsylvania and the New York Central railroads helped to develop Central Pennsylvania as the largest source of bituminous coal for the nation. By the late 19th century, the two lines were among America's largest businesses and would soon become legendary archrivals. The PRR first arrived in the 1860s. Within a few years, it was sourcing as much as four million tons of coal annually from Centre County and the Moshannon Valley and would continue do so for a quarter-century. The New York Central, through its Beech Creek Railroad affiliate, invaded the region in the 1880s, first seeking a dependable, long-term source of coal to fuel its locomotives but soon aggressively attempting to break its rival's lock on transporting the area's immense wealth of mineral and forest products. Beginning around 1900, the two companies transitioned from an era of growth and competition to a time when each tacitly recognized the other's domain and sought to achieve maximum operating efficiencies by adopting new technology such as air brakes, automatic couplers, all-steel cars, and diesel locomotives. Over the next few decades, each line began to face common problems in the form of competition from other forms of transportation and government regulation; in 1968 the two businesses merged. Branch Line Empires offers a thorough and captivating analysis of how a changing world turned competition into cooperation between two railroad industry titans.

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