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In "A Man Was a Real Man in Them Days," Ruth Burns celebrates the life and character of the pioneers who dared to challenge the vast prairie of the Llano Estacado of Eastern New Mexico. In the 1880s along the Rio Grande and Pecos Rivers, the cities of Santa Fe, Albuquerque and Ft. Sumner were bustling centers of commerce, but on the High Plains, due to the lack of dependable water, the prairie was inhabited only by occasional outlaws, Indian hunting parties, Hispanic mustangers and buffalo hunters. After the Civil War, cowmen began to bring their herds to the plains; and in 1898 when the railroad came, homesteaders poured in, lured by promises of free land. Barbed-wire fences were put up, and the day of the open range was at an end. Using interviews and letters collected by her mother in the 1930s and 1940s, Burns reveals the courage, determination, and good humor of these first settlers by using their own words, recorded while they were still living.
BE INSPIRED BY RUTH INNER STRENGTH. RESOLUTE MIND. PIONEERING SPIRIT.
Announcements for the following year included in some vols.
VOLUME II - DESCENDANT CHART: This is the companion volume to the second edition of the Wallick family history book titled Hans Michael Wallick’s Descendants in America: European Origin from 1623. The descendant chart in this book begins in 1623 with the birth of Hans Michael’s grandfather, Simon Walck, in what is now the German state of Bavaria. It contains a detailed and comprehensive list of both the male and female descendants of our first American progenitors, Hans Michael and Frederica Esther (Eisen) Walck/Wallick. Over 8,000 names are included in this descendant chart! May their Wallick tribe increase…
Newspaper records of history of Children's Home building, by author who lived at the Home 1940-46. Some photos of children with Index from census records.
(From the intro) Eight B-26 Marauder bombardment groups flew and fought from British soil from the late 1943 through October 1944. They then moved on to France with the advancing Allies, and a few of these became part of the army of occupation in Germany at the end of the war. The B-26 Marauder Historical Society is composed of the men who built, maintained and flew this controversial aircraft. They were called "The Marauder Men" who it is said "succeeded against impossible odds."
Decisions and Orders of the National Labor Relations Board, Volume 359, September 28, 2012, Through July 16, 2013