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Bøger i New York State serien

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  • af Christopher Angus
    353,95 kr.

    When Christopher Angus and two friends were canoeing a stretch of the Grass River in the Adirondacks in 1986, they were cited by the Department of Environmental Conservation for trespassing on the timberlands of the Champion Paper Company. Amazed to find that the law protects corporate rather than environmental interests in a publicly owned state park, Angus joined the decades-long battle to reopen Adirondack waterways. In this collection, Angus, a columnist and lifelong resident of the Adirondack region, writes with the discerning eye of a poet and the ear of a political commentator. He treats the reader to descriptions of his many canoeing experiences and to his thoughts on environmental protection. As Paul Jamieson writes in the Foreword, >Angus's strong ties to Canada's maritime provinces and to the St. Lawrence River expand the focus of the book to include the larger Northeastern wilderness. It is here, he maintains, in the most densely populated region of North America, that we will finally learn whether man can coexist with the natural world.

  • af Sally E Svenson
    347,95 kr.

    "A one-hundred-year history of regional photography and biographical dictionary of 233 photographers-some local, some from away, some commercially oriented, some advancing other interests-who operated in the Adirondack region of upstate New York"--

  • af Ed Hotaling
    312,95 - 472,95 kr.

  • af Harold W Thompson
    212,95 kr.

    A superb blend of good story-telling and sound scholarship this book provides a fascinating record of what "country New Yorkers" have had to say and sing about themselves as they made their way through three centuries. You'll find stories and songs about pioneers," Injun fighters," canallers, outlaws, "uncanny critters," lumberjacks, farmers lovers, murderers, and tricksters. You'll even be reminded that piracy and whaling are part of New York's many-faceted tradition. One chapter examines the origins of New York's strange place-names. Another is devoted to an engrossing account of New York's proverbs and folk wisdom.

  • af Jeremy P Felt
    377,95 kr.

  • af Ira Rosenwaike
    377,95 kr.

    The definitive reference work on the demographic history of our nation's largest city. Two major elements--the text and the tables--provide a broad perspective of population development, viewing the statistical dimensions of three centuries of change from earliest settlement to 1970. New York City has not only grown in size for three hundred years, but each phase of its history has brought new elements into its citizenry. Sociologically, New York has presented a pattern of invasion and succession on a mass scale. Basic source materials, selected from census reports, vital records, surveys, and contemporary observations, are analyzed largely in terms of the ethnic communities that have contributed to the city's>Census figures, the framework for analysis, have been interpreted here in a manner that should enlighten and inform the casual student of New York's population history as well as provide valuable documentation to the serious researcher. A glossary, a map of the New York City area, notes, bibliography, and index accompany the text and tables.

  • af Louis C Jones
    212,95 kr.

    Shortly after the Revolution, new waves of settlers came from the Hudson Valley and New England to the hillsand woodlands of Central New York. While the adults wiled to tame the wilderness later made famous by>This charming book contains extensive boyhood reminiscences from the autobiographies of two men who grew up in the Cooper Country during the frontier period--Levi Beardsley and Henry Wright. Although the two boys grew up within a few miles of each other and had similar experiences, they never knew each other. Their memoirs take on an added dimension because they viewed the world through totally different personalities. These men tell enchanting stories of life on the New York frontier. They give us memorable descriptions of>Jones's engaging introduction provides additional information about the two men and about JudgeWilliam Cooper (father of James Fenimore Cooper), who opened "the West" to settlement. This territory, which was to become home to young Levi and Henry, is shown in two maps. One traces the westward route of theBeardsleys from near the Vermont border to Richfield; the other depicts the area where the two families settled and the boys wandered and meditated during their growing years.

  • af Vincent Engels
    172,95 kr.

    Documents the decline in Adirondack fishing in the '30s. The author offers a nostalgic view of the Adirondack wilderness 50 years ago, capturing the moods of forest, stream and lake. Classic characters - Big Smith, the hermit of Boiling Pond, Noah Rondeau and others - are brought to life.

  • af Lewis Spence
    107,95 kr.

    A colorful portrait of a vanished time and a way of life as a child in the 1930s on Upper Saranac Lake.

  • af Walter D. Edmonds
    212,95 kr.

  • af Charles Champlin
    212,95 kr.

    Back There Where the Past Was is Charles Champlin's sentimental journey through the life and times of his boyhood in Hammondsport, New York. "We are all from somewhere else, " Charles Champlin begins. It is from this idea that we not only can share his childhood, but are provided with a better sense of all that we hold dear in our own past.

  • af Barbara McMartin
    267,95 kr.

    In The Adirondack Park McMartin has aptly likened the various wild forest, wilderness, recreation, and primitive areas to a patchwork quilt, with landscapes connecting to jagged boundaries following rivers and narrow valleys. Recommended "views and visits" give readers an insider's advantage to making the most of any Adirondack expedition. With a storyteller's ease, McMartin provides a brief history and description of each area. She chronicles the preserve's unusual origins, people, politics, and economics that created what is now one of the most important wilderness areas in the eastern United States.

  • af Peter Lourie
    212,95 kr.

    This first-person narrative documents one man's adventure down the Hudson River by canoe - from its source at the peak of Mount Marcy in the Adirondacks to Battery Park.

  • af Kathryn Grover
    252,95 kr.

    In a groundbreaking book, Kathryn Grover reconstructs from their own writings the lives of African Americans in Geneva, New York, virtually from its beginning in the 1790s, to the time of the community's first civil rights march in 1965.

  • af Jim Shaughnessy
    422,95 kr.

  • af Estelle Sinclaire
    317,95 kr.

    Invaluable for the collector, curator, and dealer alike, The Complete Cut & Engraved Glass of Corning bring to the field of glass collecting a rich storehouse of detailed information from unpublished original catalog material in the Corning archives, including log-lost pattern identification.

  • af Bridget Bennett
    472,95 kr.

    An examination of the dual life of Harold Frederic (1856-1898) as well as of his writing, which includes The Damnation of Theron Ware. The complexity of his life as an American living in London echoes his ambivalence about his double career in journalism and fiction writing.

  • af Judith A Dulberger
    212,95 kr.

    'Mother Donit fore the Best' is a touching collection of letters from the Albany Orphan Asylum in upstate New York-letters from parents to their children and to the asylum superintendent, as well as letters from children placed out on indenture and away from their families.

  • af Roger Whitman
    212,95 kr.

    This manuscript was rediscovered and given a new title by editors, who revived the book and shaped its historiographical context. The biography and history that emerges details a personal sruggle to build stability, wealth, and rectitude in the shifting moral and economic sands of the Jacksonian era.

  • af Henry Moscow
    182,95 kr.

    Everything you wanted to know about the unusual, arcane, and fascinating in the life of New York City. The term "only in New York" takes on new meaning in page after page of this intriguing survey of firsts in one of the world's greatest cities--from extraordinary people to ghosts and graves, from troubles and aspirations to crimes and disasters. For six years, the City had a governor who dressed in his wife's clothes and paraded along Broadway until his soldiers dragged him home. The City's first subway, dug in secret under Broadway in 1870, had elegant cars propelled by wind from a big fan. The City's first settlers were not Dutchmen, but French-speaking Protestant Belgians in 1624 who were followed by African Blacks in 1625. The first City Hall had a tavern on the premises to quench the thirst of City Fathers with beer and schnapps. The City's first bagel was produced in Clinton Street in 1896, but its ancestors date back to fourteenth-century German boar hunts.

  • af Paul Schaefer
    212,95 kr.

    Throughout his career as a photographer, writer and conservationist, Paul Schaefer has been the Adirondack's leading spokesperson and the driving force behind negotiating New York State's forever wild laws. In this autobiography, Schaefer recalls life in the mountains.

  • af Roger Mitchell
    317,95 kr.

    Roger Mitchell writes with a poet's eye for exact detail in his absorbing new book about his search for Israel Johnson--a ghostly presence who comes to haunt the reader as much as he did the author. This book might easily be thought of as a detective story in which the detective discovers himself at the center of a seeming crime. It's a lovely book, richly layered and beautifully written.

  • af Peter Rose
    367,95 kr.

    'In this beautifully illustrated book on the Dutch culinary tradition, Peter Rose has captured one important dimension of the proud legacy of Dutch contributions to American culture.' --Nancy Harmon Jenkins, Food Writer 'New York Times' and Editor, 'Journal of Gastronomy'

  • af John Keats
    212,95 kr.

    Thirty years ago, John Keats and his family purchased a two-acre island in the St. Lawrence River, at a time when boats were still lovingly crafted of wood and an island could be had for $4,000. Depending on the elements and on their own resourcefulness, the Keats family thrives in the rhythms of island life-fishing, learning to navigate the river and read the clouds for weather, acquiring an "Indian" view of time, maintaining a house, several boats, and three children on a windswept rock. But more than a book about a single family's adventures, this one is strong witness that we all need islands of our own in the midst of life. Originally published in 1974, Of Time and an Island was chosen as a Book-of-the-Month Club alternate selection.

  • af Richard Garrity
    212,95 kr.

    Richard Garrity grew up on his father's boats on the Erie Canal in the early years of this century. From 1905 until 1916, when his father operated boats first in the lumber trade and later for gravel hauling, he was surrounded by the busy life of a now-bygone era in canal boating in Upstate New York. When the Barge Canal System opened in 1918, Garrity began a career that lasted until his retirement as a tug engineer in 1970.This story is chock full of Americana that is not only significant and authentic but engagingly written. Garrity's life and work have been intimately bound up with the famed Big Ditch, which has been referred to in more romantic literature as the "shining ribbon of water." It was a hard but happy life on the waterways of Upstate New York as seen in the text and dozens of illustrations included in this book.

  • af Lionel D. Wyld
    182,95 kr.

    Those who built and used the Erie Canal were a bizarre society, proud pioneers on the waterway known in song and story as "the Horse Ocean," "the Roaring Giddap," or "the Raging Erie." Their considerable influence on American life and literature is the basis of this book.Canallers were colorful characters, from the "hoggee" on the towpath to the "shipshape macaroni" with stovepipe hat and badge of service taking command of a packet with the pride of an admiral, even though he was restricted by law to a speed of four miles per hour!Games and diversions were rough-and-tumble, fighting being as natural as breathing to the canallers. Stories about heroes like Sam Patch and Paddy Ryan, or the big fish that could haul a canal boat, or the big pumpkin that drained the canal-these were logical products of this "frontier" atmosphere. So were the songs-carefree, bawdy, or sad, inspired by the canal and sung throughout the land.Photographs and drawings, music and words to folk songs, maps, notes, and index are included in this first paperback edition.

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