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  • av Garlyn Webb Wilburn
    240,-

  • - East Texas Folkways
    av Tumbleweed Smith
    296,-

  • - Homes of the Chief Executives of Texas
    av Bill O'Neal
    280,-

    More than 250 on-site photographs illustrate this tour of homes of many of the Lone Star State's most powerful political leaders. From the Governor's Mansion in Austin to the Texas White House near Johnson City, from Sam Houston's "Wigwam" in Huntsville to the Eisenhower birthplace in Denison, almost a score of homes of Texas governors and presidents are open to the public. Two fine Victorian residences which once were governors' homes now are B&Bs, in Galveston and Weatherford. Another three dozen houses, while privately owned today, may be viewed when driving through hometowns from Lubbock to LaPorte, from Uvalde to Haskell. This travel book provides directions to these houses, as well as photos and stories of the men and women and their families who brought life to these plantation homes, log cabins, ranch houses, and mansions.

  • - The First Thanksgiving, El Paso del Norte, 1598/El Primer Dia de Accion de Gracias, El Paso del Norte, 1598
    av Bill O'Neal & Lynn O'Neal Martinez
    176,-

  • av Keith Guthrie
    320,-

  • - The Last President of the Republic of Texas
    av Jean Flynn
    150,-

  • av John C. Dawson
    310,-

  • av George M Ricker
    256,-

    Many Christians live with doubts about certain traditional Christian beliefs, and their doubts often result in guilt. Others are led to reject the faith out of disagreement with beliefs that seem to be absurd and anti-intellectual. Despite the notoriety of the fundamentalist world-view, some stories need not to be taken as literal or historical; and learning to separate fact from symbol, metaphor, or myth may actually strengthen the Christian witness. Liberation from literalism open the possibilities for greater depth of meaning to be found in what have been traditional beliefs. Bishop J.A.T. Robinson put it this way; "It is the things one doesn't have to believe, and finds one doesn't have to believe, which are truly liberating as the thingds one does.""What You Don't Have to Believe to Be a Christian," is a helpful guide to discovering the non-essential in Christian beliefs.

  • - The Life and Times of a Forgotten Patriot of the Republic of Texas: Colonel Eleazar Louis Ripley Wheelock
    av Mary Foster Hutchinson
    316,-

    Eleazar Louis Ripley Wheelock had fortunate beginnings as the grandson of the founder of Dartmouth College. But he would not take the easy route in life. His personal odyssey would lead him through poverty in pioneer Ohio, climactic battles in the War of 1812, law studies in Kentucky, peril on the Arkansas frontier, and finally, in 1824, an arduous journey to a new land that would define the man: Texas. There he became a settler with Robertson's Colony and subsequently led a life of adventure as a captain of the Texas Rangers, silver miner, founder of a fort and town, Indian agent, surveyor, rancher, land agent, lawyer, and political hopeful.Texian Odyssey is a valuable addition to the record of largely forgotten settlers who came to Texas by the thousands and created a great state out of nothing but courage and sweat.

  • - A History of the East Texas Oil Field and Oil Industry Skulduggery & Trivia
    av James M Day & Jack M Day
    266,-

    The discovery of the Black Giant in 1930 was the largest oil strike in the U.S. at that time, and its gushers changed the face of the oil industry. Oilmen, promoters, oil patch workers, and the nation's unemployed streamed into the tiny hamlets of East Texas for their share, but they faced wars between "big oil" and independent oilmen, bootleg or "hot oil," martial law, and legalized price fixing. Yet the Black Giant turned out to be the salvation of the drought-stricken farmers, helped in the fight against Germany and Japan, and made lots of folks "Texas rich."In "The Black Giant," the characters, times and oil industry skullduggery are recalled and explained in dozens of sidebars full of humorous facts and trivia. The author, law professor at Washing College of Law, The American University, practiced oil and gas law for more than 35 years and focused on oil and gas matters during the Arab oil embargo for the U.S. Department of the Interior.

  • - An Era of Continuity and Growth
    av Allan Saxe
    310,-

  • - Admiral of the Hills
    av Frank A Driskell & Dede W Casad
    330,-

  • av Glenn Shirley
    276,-

  • - German-Texan Culinary Art
    av Nevilee Weaver Weaver
    240,-

  • av Constance Douglas Reeves
    266,-

  • - Sixteen Tribes of Native Peoples and How They Lived
    av Carolyn Burnett Burnett
    246,-

  • av Ralph a Wooster
    396,-

  • - Former German POW Finds Peace in Texas
    av Heino R Erichsen
    310,-

  • - The First 100 Years
    av Tara Copp & Robert Lawrence Rogers
    330,-

  • - The First Battle of Medina August 18, 1813
    av Ted Schwarz
    300,-

  • av Evault Boswell
    490,-

    In the fall of 1863, William Clarke Quantrill, the Missouri bushwhacker, took about three hundred of his followers across Indian Territory to Sherman, Texas.In the Lone Star State, the bushwhackers made camp at Mineral Creek. Henry McCulloch, the Confederate commander of the District of Northeast Texas, tried to find a use for the pseudo-rebels, but they failed in rounding up deserters, chasing Indians, and destroying moonshiners.They did manage to ravage the city of Sherman, getting drunk and shooting the tassels off the hat of Grayson County's leading lady, Sophia Butts. They also robbed and killed citizens, including Sophia's husband.Then they began to fight among themselves until Quantrill's command splintered. Texas seemed little changed in the guerrillas' wake, but the atrocities they committed after returning north show that their time near Sherman changed them decisively.

  • - A Hiroshima POW Returns
    av T C Cartwright
    270,-

    When the Lonesome Lady was shot down during a bombing run in the Inland Sea of Japan, Pilot T. C. Cartwright and his crew became POWs. The men were interned at Hiroshima, and while the author was sent to Tokyo for interrogation, his entire crew was killed by the U. S. atomic bomb. The military failed to properly report the death of his crew. This story was reported in the New York Times and in several newspaper articles, but for the first time the author tells the story in his own words.

  • - The History of Bull Riding
    av Gail Woerner
    330,-

  • - The Largest Hotel Chain in Texas
    av Lon Bennett Glenn
    380,-

  • - Episodes of Texas Rangers in the 20th Century
    av Ben Proctor & Professor of History Ben (Texas Christian University) Procter
    306,-

  • - A Woman at West Point
    av Donna Peterson
    330,-

  • - A Prosecutor's Journal
    av Dr John E & PH.D Clark
    330,-

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