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A Small Town On Maryland's Eastern Shore
The town of Perryville in Cecil County, Maryland is on the Susquehanna River about 35 miles northeast of Baltimore. Alan Fox, a long time resident of Perryville, amateur historian, and a town commissioner selected the photographs and wrote the text of this short history of Perryville (2011) for the "Images of America" series of Arcadia Publishers. The series includes many photographic volumes preserving local American history. It offers an excellent opportunity to explore details of America and its geography and people.
The book offers a rare portrait of an American town and of the factors which make it unique. The focus of the book is on Perryville as a transportation hub on water and on rail. Readers who are fascinated by bridges will enjoy this book as it includes rare photographs of the many bridges built from Perryville across the Susquehanna River beginning with a bridge constructed by the Philadelphia, Wilmington, and Baltimore Railroad in 1866. Many subsequent bridges followed over the years. The book also shows the extensive use residents of Perryville made of the river through fishing, logging, and waterfowl hunting through the early years of the 20th Century.
Perryville also served as a railroad hub, and readers with a fascination for trains will enjoy these rare photographs. The railroad bridges receive the most attention, but Fox also presents many photos of engines, roundhouses, coaling stations, freight yards, passenger terminals and other accoutrements of the age of steam. The photos are clear, unusual, and well annotated.
Subsequent sections of the book show the development of commerce and trade in the town during its busiest years before the building of a large new highway bypassed Perryville and brought about a commercial decline. Perryville was home to foundries and iron works as well as to the general stores, barber shops, drug stores, and small restaurants characteristic of a small American town. Fox also shows the community aspects of Perryville by his photographs of churches, schools, and social activities such as baseball and bands which have been part of the life of the town for many years.
With its character as a transportation hub, the military has had an important presence in Perryville. As Fox shows,during WW I, the army operated a large munitions plant at Perry Point on the outskirts of the town and built a development including over 300 homes for the workers. After WW I, the plant became a Public Health Department Facility and subsequently became a Veterans Administration Hospital which continues to function and to play a large role in the town's economy.
This little book will be of most interest to people with a connection to Perryville, which is where the book is primarily marketed. Fortunately, the book has broader distribution through Amazon, for example, and in my local public library where I found it. The book taught me about a fascinating small part of American life and history that I hadn't known before.
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The Dooky Chase Cookbook
9781455627660
Regular price $27.95 Sale price $20.96 Save 25%Dooky Chase’s Restaurant, a New Orleans landmark and celebrated bastion of fine Creole food, has welcomed notable individuals as well as thousands of locals through its doors since opening in 1941. The unquestionable authority in the restaurant’s kitchen for many of those years, Leah Chase offers here a collection of recipes from the menu and her personal files that have delighted patrons for decades.
Spiced with exquisite works from the African American art collection that hangs in the restaurant’s dining room, this cookbook pairs the flavors of Leah Chase’s dishes with anecdotes recounting the restaurant’s traditions, origins of the recipes, and memories. This revised and expanded edition presents even more of the restaurant’s favorite offerings and features a new chapter on drinks. Dooky Chase’s longtime chef and proprietor passed away in 2019, but these pages honor Leah’s legacy through recipes and sentiments that will be forever intertwined with the history of New Orleans.
Great Lakes in 50 Maps
9781540270009
Regular price $30.00 Sale price $22.50 Save 25%The largest freshwater system on Earth, like you’ve never seen it before.
The Great Lakes region is home to one-tenth of the United States’ population, and one-quarter of Canada’s. Even if we remember the mnemonic HOMES, we might forget what a natural wonder they are. Cartographer Alex B. Hill, author of Detroit in 50 Maps, shifts our perspectives and offers a fresh look at the five lakes and the vibrant region surrounding them. Split into four categories—history & culture, ecology, infrastructure, and physical—these fifty-plus maps show the lakes’ influence and confluences, from the Underground Railroad to monarch butterfly migration. See how many NFL teams play on a Great Lake, where mysterious shipwrecks and Bigfoot sightings cluster, the lakes' effect on snowfall, and even how “not so Great” lakes have vied for (and in one case, temporarily won) a coveted Great designation. Shrinking wetlands, oil spills, and rising temperatures due to climate change reflect both the fragility of the lakes and the vital role they play.
Great Lakes in 50 Maps is perfect for anyone who appreciates the history, nature, and future of the world’s greatest group of lakes.
Stephen King's Maine
9781467157148
Regular price $24.99 Sale price $18.74 Save 25%Much of Western Maine reads like a Stephen King novel.
The dense dark woods and backcountry ponds. The century-old houses with gravel driveways and immense flower gardens, acres of farmland miles from a highway. Serpentine country roads dotted with farmstands, and picturesque main streets lined with battered pickups. Places where-especially during the dark and rainy days of October and November—things can get downright spooky.
Author Sharon Kitchens identifies the locations that serve as the basis for King’s fictional towns of Castle Rock, Jerusalem’s Lot, Derry, and Haven. Drawing on historical materials and conversations with locals and people who know King, the author sheds light on daily life in places that would become the settings for Carrie, Salem’s Lot, The Dead Zone, Cujo, IT, and 11/22/63.
Cincinnati in 50 Maps
9781540270016
Regular price $30.00 Sale price $22.50 Save 25%There are as many versions of Greater Cincinnati as there are residents of the region. That’s roughly two million different perceptions of the city.
In Cincinnati in 50 Maps, editor Nick Swartsell and cartographer Andy Woodruff present over fifty ways of looking at the Queen City, from its early roadways and Indigenous earthworks to its shifting neighborhood borders. A visualization of relative population density can tell one story, and one showing where jobs are clustered tells another. New maps with up-to-date data sit beside historical maps that show things like exactly how communities were razed to make room for highways. Broken up into five sections—Mapping the Past, the Shape of Cincinnati, Communities and Culture, Getting Around, and Health and Environment—these visual representations show both the commonalities and the contradictions of an ever-changing American city.
These maps present reported statistics in new ways, and they represent the things that make Cincinnati the unique place that residents know and love: Find every place you can get Cincinnati chili, the location of every public stairway, and where the infamous Cincy traffic is worst.
Anyone who calls or ever called Cincinnati home will find something familiar, something surprising, and something revealing in this glossy, full-color volume.
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Pittsburgh in 50 Maps
9781953368850
Regular price $30.00 Sale price $22.50 Save 25%Pittsburgh in 50 Maps offers unique new views of a city at a crossroads—culturally, economically, and demographically.
There are countless ways to map a city. Roads, bridges, and waterways help you navigate the twists and turns; topography gives you the lay of the land; population trends show you a region’s changing fortunes. But the best maps let you feel what a city’s really like. Whether you call it the Steel City, the City of Bridges, City of Champions, Hell with the Lid Off, or even the Paris of Appalachia, Pittsburgh’s distinctive character is undeniable. Pittsburgh in 50 Maps considers the boundaries of the city’s 90 distinct neighborhoods (plus Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood), the legacy of the steel industry, and how immigration continues to shape the city. You’ll also find the areas with the highest concentrations of bike lanes, supermarkets, tree cover, and fiberglass dinosaurs. Each colorful map offers a new perspective on one of America’s most consistently surprising cities and the people who live here.
Sure to be a conversation starter for Pittsburgh locals, transplants, and expats, Pittsburgh in 50 Maps is for anyone keen to understand the city in new and unexpected ways.