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It has been 12 months since Beary has arrived at the Academy from his tour aboard the Saber Claw. He enjoyed teaching the classes he had been assigned. At first, some of the older cadets resented the fact that their instructor was younger than they were. Then they would see the ribbons on his uniform and hear the rumors. Ben, of course, helped spread them. Flight training was going well. His many hours in jump ships were proving to be a blessing instead of a curse. He expected to graduate early from flight training. Caesar had spent six months at the academy then shipped off to aid a hospital ship that had lost one of its surgeons to an accident. The Hospital ship was trying to combat a new ...
The Saber Claw is a new fast destroyer built around the new Vallen/Maxumus warp engines. It is armed with new attack and electronic warfare jump ships called Daggers. These jump ships were designed for marines by marines. Beary Maxumus is a young 18 year old Bearilian Fleet Cadet with a secret. He is actually Dr. Beary Maxumus the designer of the Warp engine that powers the ship. He is also a Marine reserve Corporal who was part of an elite Special Forces unit called MSU 6. The enemy calls him the Ghost. His dream was to be just another cadet. Those dreams are about to be shattered.
Treats the developments in tenant farming communities (black and white) in Missouri's "bootheel" in the 1930s.
Mid-century Livermore saw a demographic shift from farms and ranches to suburbanization and continuing support of the existing health care industry, New Deal programs, a naval airbase, and two national laboratories. The health care industry flourished with the dedication in 1925 of a veterans' hospital, which is still operational today; the Livermore Sanitarium for the treatment of alcoholism and mental disorders; and the Del Valle Sanitarium for the treatment of tuberculosis. During the 1930s, Livermore residents supported the Hetch Hetchy Project and numerous efforts of the Works Progress Administration. A naval airbase for training pilots was established in 1942, during World War II. This base became the Lawrence Livermore Radiation Laboratory in the 1950s and was soon accompanied by an extension of Sandia National Laboratories across the street.
This book covers the history, people, places, projects, and events of Livermore, California, arranged alphabetically in encyclopedic form.
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James Harvey Heath (1814-1904) was born at Washington, Louisiana, the son of John Waldrod and Mary Hill Harvey Heath. He and his wife, Trissa Ridgedale (1816-1843), had four children, 1836-1841, born at Jackson, Mississippi, three died young. The family joined The Church of Jesus-Christ of Latter-day Saints and migrated to Nauvoo, Illinois. James Harvey Heath married 2) Hulda Mariah Holden (1824-1894) at Nauvoo in 1845. They had ten children, 1846-1865. The family migrated to Salt Lake City in 1851 with the Mormon pioneers. James Harvey married 3) Abigail Holden, widow of Hulda's brother. They had two sons, 1855-1857. James Harvey and Abigail were later divorced. James Harvey and Hulda Heath died at Bicknell, Utah. Descendants listed in Utah, Idaho and elsewhere.
John Ewbank was born 19 June 1752. He married Ann Chapman (1766-1898). They had ten children. They emigrated in 1807 from the parish of Ampleforth, Yorkshire, England and settled in Indiana. John died 11 February 1832. John Smith was born 31 August 1778 in Thirst, Yorkshire, England. He married Jane Wayne (1778-1863). They had ten children. They emigrated in 1818 and settled in Guilford, Indiana. Three of their children married children of John and Ann Ewbank. Descendants and relatives lived mainly in Indiana, Tennessee, Illinois, Texas, Kansas and Oklahoma. Includes Randall, Hall and related families.