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Books published by publisher Dunecadia Publishing

  • Massachusetts: What's So Great About This State?

    Kate Boehm Jerome

    Paperback (Arcadia Publishing, May 23, 2011)
    Arcadia Kids is a new series of fun, colorful, easy-to-read books for children ages 7-11 featuring attention-grabbing cover art, inviting conversational style content, and vivid full-color images of landmarks and geography. Parents, grandparents, and savvy shoppers will appreciate the feel good factor of purchasing books that are both fun AND educational. DO YOU KNOW... HOW kettle ponds formed throughout the state of Massachusetts? (Hint: Think underground ice cubes!) WHAT famous doctor is honored in Springfi eld, Massachusetts? (Hint: A cat tips his hat to this hometown hero!) Find these answers and more in the Massachusetts edition of What's So Great About This State? TM
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  • The Statue of Liberty

    Barry Moreno

    eBook (Arcadia Publishing, )
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  • Lake Havasu City

    Frederic B. Wildfang

    Paperback (Arcadia Publishing, Oct. 3, 2005)
    Founded in 1964 as a planned community, Lake Havasu City is nestled amid craggy desert peaks on the Colorado River in western Arizona. Perhaps best known as the American home of the famous London Bridge―moved to town, piece by piece, in 1971 and painstakingly reconstructed―Lake Havasu City was first home to natives of the Mohave and Chemehuevi tribes. Steamboats plying the waters of the Colorado, mining interests in the region, and the construction of Parker Dam, which resulted in the 45-mile-long Lake Havasu, all played important roles in the development of this unique community. Today, the city’s more than 50,000 residents and 2.5 million annual visitors enjoy myriad recreational opportunities in this desert oasis,as well as a historical legacy unlike any other.
  • Rochester and the State of New York:: Cool Stuff Every Kid Should Know

    Kate Boehm Jerome

    Paperback (Arcadia Publishing, May 2, 2011)
    DO YOU KNOW...WHY the letter k starts and ends the word Kodak?(Hint: This letter had a real advantage!)WHAT famous supermarket started out in 1916 as theRochester Fruit & Vegetable Company?(Hint: It sells a lot more items today!)Find these answers and more in Cool Stuff Every Kid Should Know?--an interesting little book about a very special place on the planet! Arcadia Kids is a new series of fun, colorful, easy-to-read books for children ages 7-11 featuring attention-grabbing cover art, inviting conversational style content, and vivid full-color images of landmarks and geography. Parents, grandparents, and savvy shoppers will appreciate the feel good factor of purchasing books that are both fun AND educational.
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  • Georgia: What's So Great About This State?

    Kate Boehm Jerome

    Paperback (Arcadia Publishing, April 7, 2010)
    Help your child discover and understand exactly what makes Georgia so great - and perhaps learn a thing or two yourself!DO YOU KNOW… WHY the land in the Okefenokee Swamp seems to move? (Hint: It has to do with floating islands!) WHAT threatened the entire Georgia cotton business in the early 1920s? (Hint: It was smaller than your fingernail!) Find these answers and more in the Georgia edition of What's So Great About This State? Arcadia Kids is a new series of fun, colorful, easy-to-read books for children ages 7-11 featuring attention-grabbing cover art that invites conversational style content, and vivid full-color images of landmarks and geography. Parents, grandparents, and savvy shoppers will appreciate the feel good factor of purchasing books that are both fun AND educational.
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  • Bodie: 1859-1962

    Terri Lynn Geissinger

    eBook (Arcadia Publishing, June 8, 2009)
    Nestled amongst the sage-covered, windswept hills of California�s Eastern Sierra is the site of one of the most notorious mining towns of the Old West. In 1859, gold was discovered in the treeless hills northeast of Mono Lake. By 1879, Bodie was a metropolis of nearly 10,000 souls and was briefly the third-largest city in California. Excitement was short-lived, however, and word soon spread that the mines had reached peak production. An exodus began, but contrary to popular belief, Bodie was never totally abandoned. People continued living in this curious and beautiful place throughout the 1950s, and in 1962, the California State Parks system purchased the town site. Now stabilized against the elements, Bodie is today known as the largest unrestored ghost town in the West.
  • RMS Queen Mary

    Suzanne Tarbell Cooper, Frank Cooper, Athene Mihalakis Kovacic, Don Lynch, John Thomas, Queen Mary Archives

    Paperback (Arcadia Publishing, July 19, 2010)
    Launched in an era when speed and grandeur went hand in hand, the RMS Queen Mary is the last survivor of the golden age of ocean liners. From the time of her maiden voyage in 1936, passengers crossed the North Atlantic cocooned in luxury. Movie stars, tycoons, politicians, and royalty shared a ship with everyday people, for whom this was a once-in-a-lifetime experience. During World War II, the Queen Mary ferried countless soldiers safely across the sea and, at war’s end, carried their brides and babies home to America. Refurbished and polished to her previous glory, the Queen Mary continued to carry passengers until her final voyage to Long Beach in 1967. The RMS Queen Mary now serves as a floating hotel and tourist attraction, a living testament to her glamorous history, a generous showcase of art, and a magnificent example of a time when oceans could be crossed in both comfort and beauty.
  • Bristol Motor Speedway

    David M. McGee, Sonya Haskins

    eBook (Arcadia Publishing, Aug. 5, 2013)
    When Bristol�s race track opened in 1961, tickets were often given away to fill the 18,000 seats. Over the years, Bristol Motor Speedway has grown to 160,000 seats and legendary status among race fans. There is a fascination with the unforgettable moments that take place at the track, including rivalries that are hard to miss when fans can watch all the action around the half-mile track no matter where they are seated.
  • Missions of San Francisco Bay

    Robert A. Bellezza

    eBook (Arcadia Publishing, Feb. 17, 2014)
    Legendary explorer Lt. Col. Juan Bautista de Anza completed a 1,000-mile journey from Sonora, Mexico, crossing the Mojave Desert with the first settlers, to San Francisco’s pristine harbor. Fr. Francisco Palóu celebrated the dedication of Mission San Francisco de Asís on June 29, 1776. First established to protect Spain’s interests in Alta California from foreign ships, California’s landmark buildings are featured here with newly discovered photography depicting a romantic era of colorful Spanish conquistadors, Franciscan padres, and mission Indian neophytes from 1769 to 1823. Explore the heritage of California pioneers’ first communities and the 21 California Spanish missions of adobe, stone, and tile that are considered architectural wonders that have captured the imagination of visitors and historians over centuries.
  • Pismo Beach

    Effie McDermott

    Paperback (Arcadia Publishing, Oct. 14, 2013)
    Pismo Beach was home to some of America’s earliest people. They thrived in the mild climate and were sustained by abundant natural resources, including the now famous Pismo clam. European settlers developed Mission San Luis Obispo de Tolosa and Rancho Pismo. With the breakup of the rancho, a small town grew at the beach. The spectacular wide, sandy beach, stretching away from hills and a rugged shoreline, has drawn many photographers to the town, its people, and its progress. An early aerial photograph of Pismo Beach was taken not from an airplane but from kites.
  • The Western Maryland Railway

    Anthony Puzzilla

    Paperback (Arcadia Publishing, Nov. 30, 2015)
    The Western Maryland Railway was never a large Class 1 rail carrier, but during its 131 colorful years of existence, it provided extremely fast, efficient, and reliable freight; coal-hauling; and passenger service in the states it served. This book contains images from the history of this remarkable railroad and also provides the reader the opportunity to see how the legacy of the Western Maryland Railway is being maintained and remembered even today at some of its well-known train stations, such as in Cumberland and Union Bridge, Maryland, now home to the Western Maryland Railway Historical Society (WMRHS). The Western Maryland is now gone, but through the wonderful images captured and preserved by the WMRHS and private archival photograph collections, the dream of the railway will live on.
  • Eastern State Penitentiary

    Francis X. Dolan

    eBook (Arcadia Publishing, Aug. 8, 2007)
    The most significant building project of its time, Eastern State Penitentiary was designed to reshape the mind of an inmate, rather than punish the body of one. It was believed that by keeping prisoners isolated in the chapel-like cells the inner light of their souls would emerge, leading them to discover penitence. In reality, the isolation was nearly impossible to maintain, and the lofty goals of thefounders crumbled in the 20th century, much like the building itself. Originally located on the outskirts of Philadelphia, the city eventually expanded and swallowed up the prison. Its unique location becameproblematic, and numerous escapes and riots threatened the civilian populace in the area. The prison was home to such well-known figures as Chicago mob boss Al Capone and bank robber Willie Sutton, once the most wanted man in America. Eastern State Penitentiary chronicles the history of this massive prison from its opening in 1829 to its closing and abandonment in 1971, and finally to the rebirth of the prison in the 1990s as a thriving historic site and national historic landmark.