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This is a true account of the first Seventh-day Adventist Church and Church School in the town of Valle Crucis, North Carolina. This book is about the people who lived in that western North Carolina community--about the rough, narrow, crooked hollers and the well-beaten, wooded paths winding across the hills at the head of the hollers that shortened the distance for the people and students going to the church and school.
Chiefly a record of the descendants of brothers Alexander Clarke and Jeremiah Clark. Alexander was born ca. 1725 and died about 1782. He married Joannah May, who was born in 1740 and died after 1838. Jeremiah was born ca. 1739 and died ca. 1780. He married Nancy Ann, who was born ca. 1743 and died 8 Nov 1836. Alexander and Joannah were the parents of nine children. Jeremiah and Nancy were the parents of seven children. Descendants of these men lived in Virginia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, and elsewhere.
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If the truth were told, this volume and its direct antecedents must rank among the most ambitious, if not simply pretentious, endeavors imag inable, at least in the social sciences. The titles of the volume and the chapters, promising to integrate the experiences of the sense of justice and the affectional bonding of people in close relations, seem straightforward and reasonable enough. What they fail to convey, however, is the simple bald fact that we in the human social sciences have no firm grasp on either of these two fundamental experiences-what we sometimes call "love" and "justice. " To begin with, even as "scientists" committed to under standing based upon systematic propositions lin...
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