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Early Reno In Images Of America
"The Biggest Little City In The World." This is the famous slogan Reno, Nevada has long used to describe itself. This photographic history, "Early Reno" (2011) tells the story of this slogan, and of the equally famous Reno arch, as well as much else about this fascinating and unusual American community. The Nevada Historical Society Docent Council wrote this book drawing extensively on its archives of Nevada history. The book displays a love for the community and its history.
The central chapters of this book tells the history of the Reno that most people know. It explores Reno as a center for easy divorces from the early 20th Century through about 1970 and it explores Reno as a center for gambling -- well before the rise of Las Vegas. The book also discusses a famous event in Reno -- the heavyweight championship fight between Jack Johnson and James Jefferies on July 4, 1910 which became forever known as the "Fight of the Century" and has been memorialized in films, literature, and popular culture.
The remainder of the book, however, shows more of Reno. The book puts the founding of the city in the context of Western migration and Nevada statehood, granted in 1864. Reno's early history is tied closely to mining and to railroads, especially to the first Transcontinental Railroad which passed directly through Reno. The opening chapters of this book show rare photographs of the community from its earliest days emphasizing the difficulty of settlement, the danger from fires, early mining, and the building of the railroads. The "biggest little city in the world" comes alive.
Then the book describes the rise of the automobile and the airplane which, together with the demise of mining, made Reno the center it became for tourism, marriage and divorce, and gaming. With all of this notoriety, Reno was still a city where people lived their lives. The book shows how life developed in Reno through schools, religious institutions, community organizations, local businesses, sports and recreation, and more. The book, in short, offers a portrayal of a place that offered more than sin.
The images and the supporting texts and introductory materials are informative and well-done and the book includes a good bibliography for those wishing to read further. The book is part of the Images of America series of local American photographic histories. The series shows the breadth and diversity of American life and American communities. I have never been to Reno, but I enjoyed learning about its history and visiting it through this short book.
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The Buildings of Frank Lloyd Wright at Florida Southern College
9780738525112
Regular price $7.99 Save Liquid error (snippets/product-template line 248): Computation results in '-Infinity'%As Florida Southern College embarked upon an ambitious building program in the 1930s, the serendipitous arrival of Frank Lloyd Wright transformed the future of the school.
Pres. Ludd Myrl Spivey was a leader with limitless imagination, and he realized the virtue in bringing an architect of Wright's renown to Lakeland. Wright's first visit to the lakeside campus was in 1938. He envisioned a grand 18-unit Child of the Sun campus, where buildings would grow from the Florida sand into the light. The buildings are especially suited to the landscape and are connected thematically by a series of covered walkways Wright called the Esplanade. Over the next 20 years, 12 of these unique structures were constructed at Florida Southern, and today they comprise the world's largest single-site collection of Frank Lloyd Wright's work. The campus attracts thousands of visitors annually, and preservation and restoration projects are ongoing. The Florida Southern College Architectural District was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1975. Enjoy the rich legacy of Frank Lloyd Wright’s work at Florida Southern College in this collection of 15 historic black-and-white postcards.
Tempe
9780738525082
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Athens
9780738525181
Regular price $9.99 Save Liquid error (snippets/product-template line 248): Computation results in '-Infinity'%In this photographic history, author Richard A. Straw and the Athens County Historical Society document the long and illustrious history of this home to Ohio State University.
In the late 1700s, a group of men, largely from Massachusetts, came into the foothills of the Appalachian Mountains and settled a village in southeastern Ohio alongside the Hocking River. Calling it Athens to honor their belief in the primacy of education and culture in one's life, they set in motion a history that continues to inform and enliven life within this community today. Ohio University, the first public institution of higher learning in the Northwest Territory, was founded here in 1804. Athens has served as a business, service, cultural, and educational meeting place for over 200 years. As a result, Athens is a culturally diverse community of professors, plumbers, lawyers, craftsmen, restaurateurs, students, musicians, artists, and business owners, and it is heir to a historic past. Enjoy the rich history of Athens in 15 historic black-and-white postcards, provided by the vast archives of the Athens County Historical Society and Museum.
Southington
9780738525136
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9780738566009
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Albuquerque Deco and Pueblo
9780738595306
Regular price $7.99 Save Liquid error (snippets/product-template line 248): Computation results in '-Infinity'%Albuquerque's response to Modernism—the architectural avant-garde of the first half of the 20th century—was complex and varied.
The growing city looked to the new as well as the mythic past characterized by the Santa Fe style. The result was rarely restricted to one cultural tradition. Influences include forms and motifs from a variety of intermixed cultural and social collisions. The result can be sophisticated, as with the Albuquerque Indian Hospital, or homespun, like the Shaffer Hotel in Mountainair. Enjoy the rich architectural history of Albuquerque and its unique cultural mixing of various Native American, Hispanic, and 19th- and 20th-century Anglo American forms and motifs in 15 historic black-and-white postcards.