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Kirjailija

Richard Eller

Kirjat ja teokset yhdessä paikassa: 6 kirjaa, julkaisuja vuosilta 2019-2024, suosituimpien joukossa Hickory Then and Now the Complete History. Vertaile teosten hintoja ja tarkista saatavuus suomalaisista kirjakaupoista.

6 kirjaa

Kirjojen julkaisuhaarukka 2019-2024.

Tell Us, Marcellus...

Tell Us, Marcellus...

Richard Eller; Claudia Ward

Redhawk Publications
2024
pokkari
They were Hickory's most prominent and interesting couple. Elizabeth Camp Denison Rutherford was twice widowed, the second time by an older man who left her a fortune. Marcellus Thornton was a peacock, who became a brief nationwide sensation for eating a quail a day for 30 straight days. They met, courted and married in Washington, DC and with her inheritance, went on a spree of buying an Atlanta newspaper which failed and a Kentucky coal mine which succeeded.After the Queen Anne styled Shuler home in Hickory came onto the market, the Thorntons purchased the house and moved in. Elizabeth became a recluse while, with her money, 'Colonel' Thornton (as he dubbed himself) bought the local newspaper, the town's electric company and wrote two novels.Gossip around town centered on the relationship and when she died folks had plenty to talk about.
Untouchable

Untouchable

Kathryn T Greathouse; Richard Eller

Redhawk Publications
2021
pokkari
The moment had come. As players stepped onto the field they knew this game was the most important one they might ever play. The stadium where they had earned the right to compete for the state championship was just across town from their home field, but in terms of its grandeur, the two gridirons were a study in contrasts. The team practiced and played on their home turf so much, overuse had turned the field to dirt. In fact, everyone knew Ridgeview's arena as "the Dust Bowl." Senior lineman Xenophone Lutz remembered there was "very little grass. At halftime you could see dust in the lights, so you knew Ridgeview was playing football." Now the Ridgeview Panthers walked onto the a surface so cushioned by grass, they all took notice. "Other teams had grass, we didn't have grass," recalled senior halfback Douglas Bumgarner, so when the team won their semifinal game at the Dust Bowl, the field at the local college was deemed to be a more appropriate place for the State 2A Negro League Championship. The choice of Lenoir-Rhyne College as the site of the game was an ironic one since the school at that time did not allow African-Americans as students.