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No. 1. Burton Stone to Jewbury -- No. 2. From St Leonard's cloisters to Cliffords Tower -- No. 3. From Dringhouses to Micklegate Bar -- No. 4. Micklegate -- No. 5. St Martin's Lane to the Staith -- No. 6. Pavement -- Appendix 1. Mayne bread -- Appendix 2. Amenities of life at York in the reigns of Henry VI, Queen Elizabeth, and King James I -- Appendix 3. Luxuries, tea and coffee.
In her fourth book of memoirs, Margaret Wharton continues her G.I. bride reminiscences as she paints a picture of life in England before, during, and after World War II. Emphasizing the years from her arrival in the United States until her retirement in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, she tells of her initial homesickness as she is assimilated into a new way of life and describes her years as a housewife in a small suburban town as she raises two sons and resumes her teaching career. She relates the many travels that she and her husband made together, the accounts taken from the detailed journals she assiduously kept of the trips. She also tells something of the Southern family she married into...