The Latchstring Is Out

The Latchstring Is Out PDF

Author: Al Fritsch

Publisher:

Published: 2020-08-27

Total Pages: 228

ISBN-13: 9780984644889

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Kentucky pioneers would appreciate the title, "The Latchstring is Out." This expression refers to a leather string hanging out a log cabin doorhole, which welcomes strangers by allowing them to enter. When pulled in, the internal latch is locked and the door is closed to outsiders. How does one make the lessons of life a tool for helping others? This autobiography is not a boring day by day or a month by month accounting. Rather, it is a selected theme appropriate to the particular year of life, and related experiences from my (hopefully) accumulated wisdom to embellish that selected topic. The seasons of my life are arranged in early years, formal higher education and beginnings of work, major portion of public interest work, and reflections on these experiences in preparation for closure. Each of the 88 essays (until 2020) correspond to a year of my life; the title involves an issue highly associated with that particular year, which sets a particular tone, and attempts to show my growth in environmental consciousness.

Annals

Annals PDF

Author: Early Settlers' Association of Cuyahoga County, Cleveland, O.

Publisher:

Published: 1895

Total Pages: 786

ISBN-13:

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Conquest of a Continent

Conquest of a Continent PDF

Author: Theodore M. Banta

Publisher: Theodore Michael Banta

Published: 2000

Total Pages: 562

ISBN-13: 0738859281

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Have you ever wondered as you drove across this great country of ours, who were those guys who wrested this continent from primeval forests, the raging and untamed rivers, the desolate and seeming unconquerable deserts? In short, a threatening, inhospitable and uncivilized land, unexplored, with untold terrors awaiting those foolish enough to take that next step into that vast wilderness. Who were those courageous, fearless frontiersmen who never hesitated to take that next step. This historical novel seamlessly follows a family, the Bantas, through twelve generations, nine of which lived their lives as frontiersmen on the edge of civilization on the North American continent. It is based on historic facts and human figures which the author, through deductive analysis, brought to life. Names, places and dates in this narrative are as historically accurate as the author's knowledge and sources permit. Most quotations other than those that are indented are imaginary. From the progenitor of the Banta family name, Epke Jacobs, who arrived in Vlissingen, New Amsterdam, New Netherland, in 1659, through Theodore Parker Banta (T. P.) of the eighth generation on this continent, there was a constant movement by each following generation to the frontier´s edge. They were always pushing the edge of the envelope in its odyssey of two?hundred and forty-one years across a new continent from Flushing on the Atlantic coast to the Imperial Valley fifty miles from the Pacific Ocean. Part I of this book follows the first seven generations. It begins telling Epke Jacobse's story of his and his family's migration in 1659 from Minertsga on the dike protected lowlands of the Rhine River's delta in Friesland, the northern province of Holland, and continues with his arrival into the Dutch colony of New Netherland to operate an inn on Long Island. It concludes with seventh generation Frederick Banta's, migration to Hanging Grove Township near Rensellear, Indiana, where he bought land from the United States government and carved a farm from hillocks in its swampy land. During these seven generations, each following generation reached out and settled the continents newest frontier. T. P. of the eighth generation, along with his wife and sons were the last of these generations of frontiersmen. His story, part II of this book, is the story of the conquering of the last frontier in the contiguous United States of America. His frontier was the delta of the Colorado River, named the Colorado Desert - the most God-forsaken and dead world imaginable. He and his wife Carrie, along with their three sons, were the fourth family to settle in the desert under its new name, the Imperial Valley. Who, in their wildest dreams, could foresee that this desolation could be made to bloom through irrigation water from the Colorado River in an abundance of luxurious green which caused it to become the vegetable garden of the nation. Starting one hundred and seventeen years before the American Revolution, this book tells a continuous story in human terms of the building of our great nation, the United States of America. This historical novel takes you from the delta of the Europe's great Rhine River, where dikes held back the North Sea from flooding the lands, to the delta of North America's great Colorado River consisting of nothing but a sandy desert crossing the Gulf of California. It does this by following one line of one family that never left the frontier for over 242 years.