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This is a very personal history of one man's experiences and those of his family during World War II. From hometown to Pearl Harbor on to Officer Candidate School and the European Theater of Operations, Lou Stephenson saw the war through the eyes of medics and hospital staff caring for some of the most severely wounded in both Pacific and European theaters. And yet, he focused most often on the escapes from war - officer's parties, leave time in foreign countries, and the love he shared with Dorie, his darling wife.
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Reprint of the original, first published in 1865. Science and Art Departament of the Commitlee of Council on Education.
Anthony Peeler I (Bieller-Biehler-Bühler-Beiler) in 1738 immigrated from the Palatinate of Germany (via Rotterdam) to Philadelphia, and settled in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, moving later to Rowan County, North Carolina, and then to Granville County, North Carolina. Descendants and relatives lived in chiefly in Pennsylvania, North Carolina, the deep south, and the midwest.
The alkaline igneous rocks and carbonatites are compositionally and mineralogically the most diverse of all igneous rocks and, apart from their scientific interest, are of major, and growing, economic importance. They are important repositories of certain metals and commodities, indeed the only significant sources of some of them, and include Nb, the rare earths, Cu, V, diamond, phosphate, vermiculite, bauxite, raw materials for the manufacture of ceramics, and potentially Th and U. The economic potential of these rocks is now widely appreciated, particularly since the commencement of the mining of the Palabora carbonatite for copper and a host of valuable by-products. Similarly, the crucial...
The cemeteries of Winston County contain the ancestors of the descendants who now populate the county. The earliest settlers, Civil War soldiers, early county officials and politicians, merchants, tradesmen, farmers, and their familes are there. Without their efforts to carve an existence out of the Winston County wildnerness, the rest of us simply would not be here. The history of the county was written in the cemeteries found across the county. Volume 2 of this two volume series covers Winston County Cemeteries L through W beginning with the Little Cemetery and ending with the Wolfpen Cemetery. This volumes also contains a list of missing or destroyed cemeteries. The book contains dozens of pictures of the cemeteries plus hundreds of annotations which include sites of unmarked graves plus the company and unit of every known Civil War era soldier, both Union and Confederate. The book concludes with a full name index. This book is vital to any serious student of Winston County genealogy and history.