American Heritage Magazine (April 1989 - Volume 40 Number 3)


By: DOBELL, Byron--editor

Price: $9.95

Quantity: 1 available

Condition: Collectible - Good

Views: 205


No marks or writing observed in text. Binding tight and square. Gently read. Faux brown leather boards with inset picture and gilt lettering and decoration. Includes: ** A Message In A Bottle: Or, Honeymoon On Cannon Mountain (As newlyweds in 1901 they were the first to climb the towering Montana peak, but when evidence of the feat surfaced after eighty-four years, nobody believed it) by Marian Cannon Schlesinger. // . ** Collecting History (Wherever you travel in this country, you have a good chance of bringing a piece of the past home with you) by Richard F. Snow. // . ** Powder River Country (THE MOVIES, THE WARS, AND THE TEAPOT DOME - A journey of a hundred miles on a Wyoming interstate turns up the true stories behind the powerful Western myths) by Oakley Hall. // . ** Revolutionary Village (The little town of Lebanon, Connecticut, played a larger role in the Revolution than Williamsburg, Virginia, did. And it's all still there.) by Christopher Weeks. // . ** The House At Eighth And Jackson (Clues uncovered during the recent restoration of his house at Springfield help humanize the Lincoln portrait) by Geoffrey C. Ward. // . ** The Hub Of The Solar System (The author walks us through literary Boston at its zenith. But Boston being what it is, we also come across the Revolution, ward politics, and the great fire.) by Peter Davison. // . ** The Terrible Price Of Freedom (The bloodiest day's fighting in our nation's history took place on ground that has hardly changed since 1862. Antietam today offers a unique chance to grasp what a great Civil War battle was actually like.) by Stephen W. Sears

Title: American Heritage Magazine (April 1989 - Volume 40 Number 3)

Author Name: DOBELL, Byron--editor

ISBN Number: B0028QI95W

Location Published: American Heritage: April 1989

Size: Leather

Book Condition: Collectible - Good

Categories: American History

Seller ID: 50082