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Each town, each place is steeped in memories. Some of these stories you already know, and some are hidden within the collective depths of the people who remember. Today, we share more of those stories. 

Storytelling and passing down the memories from generation to generation is a fundamental part of our history and the human experience. So it's our absolute joy to be a part of that experience and bring you new histories, new stories, and new ways to preserve our past.

Let's dive in.

Cover image for Prairie Flyers of Central Illinois, isbn: 9781467159296
Prairie Flyers of Central Illinois by Edith Brady-Lunny, Denis Hambucken & John Warner
When Mother Nature made American prairies, she created one vast airfield. It’s not mere chance that so many aviation pioneers are from the Midwest—farm kids, small-town kids—who grew up accustomed to vast expanses of earth and sky. Barnstormers, flight attendants, NASA engineers, crop dusters, World War II bombers and Vietnam helicopter pilots were dispatched from areas of the heartland, places like Central Illinois. Their stories, big and small, bear testimony to America’s enduring fascination with flying machines, a fascination that has taken prairie flyers to every corner of the world. Edith Brady-Lunny, Denis Hambucken and John Warner offer a ground-level view of aviation history in the nation’s heartland, including personal stories of the flyers and the global legacy of the Flying Farmer organization. 
Cover image for Eerie Colorado, isbn: 9781467158411
Eerie Colorado by Jack Daly
The Hatchet Lady of Red Rocks, the ghostly Stanley Hotel and the terrifying Slide-Rock Bolter are just some of astonishing legends, eerie locations and strange monsters that compose Colorado’s supernatural folklore. Stories of Bigfoot, UFOs and lake monsters vex the state’s history. Haunted houses lurk throughout the state, as do cursed roads and bridges. Folklorist and award-winning author Jack Daly guides us on an odyssey through the uncanny, with a quest of unraveling the mysteries of the preternatural in Colorado.
Cover image for Salem in the American Revolution, isbn: 9781467159470
Salem in the American Revolution by Richard J. Morris
However, that conflict left England deeply in debt and determined to reduce its obligations by taxing America. Salem’s citizens initially opposed parliamentary taxes because they believed that the English were profiting from them. As Britain levied new taxes and pressed local officials to collect them, divisions erupted in town. In 1774, Salem became the capital of Massachusetts. By then, its citizens were being taxed from abroad, governed by an English general and tried before judges and juries appointed by royal officials. Join historian Richard J. Morris as he explores how the struggle for independence changed the town of Salem.
Cover image for The Murder of Sheriff W. W. Withers and Other Historic Eugene Cases, isbn: 9781467158800
Oregon gained statehood in 1859, but law and order had a harder time gaining a foothold in the West. Born and raised near Eugene, popular Lane County Sheriff W.W. Withers was shot while investigating a horse theft. The trial for his murder would end in the county’s last official hanging. Convicted killer Claude Branton, desperate to escape prison, went so far as to try to hold up the guards with a potato carved into the shape of a gun. The risk of death in the logging industry was high, and even technological advancements like electric streetlights posed a hazard for locals.
Get lost in history with these stories and more!Â