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Striker’s Grove: New Berkshire Connection is the second book in the series, following Striker’s Grove, where a group of friends affectionately known as the Six-Pack had gone through some difficult twists and turns. Continuing with the account of their lives in this book, some families remain together while achieving personal and career growth, and others endure life-altering circumstances, undesirable choices with consequences, and changes in family dynamics. An old love returns, friends move away, old friends move closer, some careers are budding, others are coming to a close, families are growing while others are fading. Through it all, the offspring of the Six-Pack enjoy life to the fullest, determining the paths their futures will take.
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Dr. Thomas Weigel was born at Becherbach, Germany about 1730. He and his wife died in 1766 and were buried in Kostroma, Russia.
Christian Christner (1799-1836), a son of Peter Christner and Magdalena Guth, was probably born in Germany, where his parents had moved from Switzerland. He married Elizabeth (1796-1862) before 1820, and the family immigrated to Canada in 1828, eventually settling in Iowa. They had eight children. Descendants live in Canada and the midwest United States.
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The life, legacy, and lessons of France's great general, who left his country to fight for American independence. The Marquis de Lafayette is an icon of American—and French—history. Lafayette's life story is the stuff of legend. Born into an aristocratic French family of warriors, made lieutenant in the French Royal Guard at age 14, and married into the royal family at 16, he traveled to the colonies at his own expense to fight in the American Revolution. By age 20, he was embraced by George Washington and Thomas Jefferson, who became his life-long friends. Here, historian Marc Leepson delivers an insightful account of the great general, whose love of liberty and passionate devotion to American and French independence shines in the pages of history.
Eminent domain is integral to a government's legal ability to take private property for a public purpose. If used correctly, the owners are paid the fair market value for their property, few citizens are inconvenienced and everyone benefits. Bad-faith abuses of eminent domain typically make the front pages of news outlets, and receive news coverage from television stations, in cities throughout our nation. To educate citizens and prevent future abuse, this book exposes both the good and the bad aspects of government's ability to use their power of eminent domain to acquire private property.