You may have to register before you can download all our books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
The Damning, Absurd, and Revelatory History of Race in America Told through the History of a Single Family Historian Julie Winch uses her sweeping, multigenerational history of the unforgettable Clamorgans to chronicle how one family navigated race in America from the 1780s through the 1950s. What she discovers overturns decades of received academic wisdom. Far from an impermeable wall fixed by whites, race opened up a moral gray zone that enterprising blacks manipulated to whatever advantage they could obtain. The Clamorgan clan traces to the family patriarch Jacques Clamorgan, a French adventurer of questionable ethics who bought up, or at least claimed to have bought up, huge tracts of la...
Across decades, Maine has produced nationally-recognized novelists of place-based fiction. From the late nineteenth century to the present, writers have explored the experiences of living in far-flung settings: island and coastal villages; northwoods lumbering communities; unincorporated townships; backcountry hamlets; and mill cities and towns. Taken together their body of work composes a remarkable literary map of a diverse and changing Maine. Hidden Places explores the identity of Maine through its writers and the people and places they captured at moments in time. Hidden Places traces the work of these writers to provoke readers into seeing and understanding Maine places with new awareness. These Maine writers construe place as both a territory on the ground and a country of the imagination. They help insiders see more clearly what is distinctive about their communities and encourage outsiders to better understand what might seem quaint or odd about the state. Like a well-drawn atlas, Hidden Places seeks to capture a diverse state at the granular level one representation at a time. It explores the identity of Maine through its writers and the people and places they wrote of.
Traces the history of the gas chamber, beginning with its first construction in Nevada in 1924 as a humane method of execution, and describes the political, corporate, and military uses for the technology through the twentieth century.
Andre Dumay/Dumetz/DeMers (1628-1711), son of Jean Dumay and Barbe Mauger of St. Jacques, Dieppe, Rouen, France, immigrated to Quebec where he married Marie Chefville/Chedville in Montreal in 1654. One descendant, Francois DeMers (1773-1861), was born in Chambly, Quebec. He married Marie Charlotte Davignon dit Beauregard in 1797 in St. Antoine de Longueuil, Quebec. Descendants lived in Canada, Minnesota, Illinois, New York, California, Nebraska, and elsewhere.
"This reference book provides comprehensive coverage of legal executions performed in the state of California from 1851 until the present. It includes all cases in which legal processes appear to have been observed and the resulting execution was carried out by an authorized representative of the county or state"--Provided by publisher.
description not available right now.
description not available right now.