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White Lake: A Historical Tour of the Nation's Safest Beach is a stroll through the history of a small lake community in southeastern North Carolina. Filled with vintage photographs, excerpts from archived articles, and personal recollections from the local residents and visitors who lived the history, the book commemorates the remarkable accomplishments of a small Southern town.
Jerry Barker has long championed North Carolina's Mountains-to-Sea Trail (MST) and led its development for many years. In Discovering North Carolina's Mountains-to-Sea Trail, he draws on that experience to take readers on a unique journey along the trail's full route, sharing the rich history and stories that live on each segment. Connecting the trail to the Indigenous history of western North Carolina, the long military presence near the Carolina coast, and more, Barker offers a new way to understand and appreciate not only the natural beauty of North Carolina but also its people and history. Dedicated long-distance hikers and day-trippers alike will value and enjoy this armchair guide. * Includes abundant illustrations with over fifty color photographs and maps for each of the MST's nineteen segments * Narrates significant histories related to each MST segment * Places prominent natural features of the trail in context * Introduces hikers to nearby attractions, cultural heritage sites, and trail towns Jerry Barker, a writer and avid hiker, is a former president of Friends of the Mountains-to-Sea Trail. He lives in Raleigh, North Carolina.
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This essay is a system of the world based upon the Descartes’ model. But this model has been greatly amended by adding an angular momentum to the corpuscles of aether. This allows for retrieving the Newton laws of gravitation and the transverse properties of light. This aether is both the middle of light and the cause of gravitation. This aether is complying with both the Hamilton’s principle and the energy equipartition principle.
Trans-Allegheny Pioneers is, without a doubt, one of the most celebrated accounts of life on the Virginia frontier ever written. The author's focal point is the region of the New River-Kanawha in present-day Montgomery and Pulaski counties, Virginia. This is essential reading for anyone interested in frontier history or the genealogies of mid-18th century families who resided in the Valley of Virginia.
In a novel set during the 1906 Atlanta race riot, the author tries to make sense of what happened by weaving into the story issues such as media sensationalism, interracial love, social Darwinism, and class divisions within both the black and white communities. Original.
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Faye Carroll is an associate professor of political science at Western Kentucky University.
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