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Bead Tapestry Patterns Peyote Study by Edwin Lord Weeks

Bead Tapestry Patterns Peyote Study by Edwin Lord Weeks

Georgia Grisolia

Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2016
nidottu
A book with a bead pattern for making a Tapestry Peyote beaded item with Miyuki Delica size 11 beads. Study by Edwin Lord Weeks is 12" x 19" and uses 66 matte colors There is a large image, a list of the color numbers with amounts and a Word chart. Now you can make this in beads for yourself. These would be so dramatic for your home. Colorful and in large print.
The Cape Cod Murder of 1899: Edwin Ray Snow's Punishment & Redemption

The Cape Cod Murder of 1899: Edwin Ray Snow's Punishment & Redemption

Theresa Mitchell Barbo

History Press Library Editions
2007
sidottu
On a crisp September evening in 1899, a seventeen-year-old petty thief named Edwin Ray Snow shot and killed a bakery deliveryman named Jimmy Whittemore outside Yarmouth. The gunshots rang out for only a moment, but the effects resounded on Cape Cod for half a century. The idyllic atmosphere of turn-of-the-century Cape Cod was shattered in a flash. Soon after the crime, Snow pleaded guilty to murder in the first degree, and was the first person ever to be sentenced to death by electric chair in Massachusetts history. But his compelling story didn't end there, and his redemption--earned through decades of hard time--was as dramatic and uplifting as his crime was heinous. Drawing upon town records, historical documents, correspondence and newspapers of the day, The Cape Cod Murder of 1899 recreates the towns of Dennis and Yarmouth at the turn of the century and examines the details of a murder that shook Cape Cod to its core.
Memorial Star: The story of Edwin R. Woodriffe, the first African-American FBI agent killed in the line of duty
Special Agent Edwin Woodriffe was one of the first African-Americans to integrate the Federal Bureau of Investigation in the 1960s. On January 8, 1969, while attempting to apprehend an escaped fugitive, he and partner Anthony Palmisano were mortally wounded, making Woodriffe the first African-American FBI agent to be killed in the line of duty. In a time of racial unrest and civil uprising, the event rocked the Department of Justice and the American people, and inspired one of the most massive manhunts in the history of the nation's capital. This is the story behind the headline.