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Books published by publisher Lewes Historical Society

  • The Lost Locket of Lewes

    Ilona E. Holland, Judy Love

    Paperback (Lewes Historical Society, Sept. 1, 2018)
    What would you do if you uncovered a real locket from 1880 on the beach?Join Virginia and Rodney as they discover a world that spans two centuries. Traveling through time, they unravel the mystery of e Lost Locket of Lewes. is book combines facts with ction to keep you turning the pages while learning about Lewes, Delaware and life in the 19th century.National Winner: First Place for Children's Fiction given by the National Federation of Press Women, 2019
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  • Captured! A Boy Trapped in the Civil War

    Mary Blair Immel

    Hardcover (Indiana Historical Society, Sept. 1, 2005)
    Fourteen-year-old Johnny Ables, pressed into service in the Confederate army, is forced to participate in a major Civil War battle and ends up in an Indiana prison camp. Based on the true story of a real boy.
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  • Inside Box 1663

    Eleanor Jette, Cover Art and Design: Margaret Rice Jette

    Paperback (Los Alamos Historical Society, May 30, 2008)
    As the author herself put it, this is "the lives of men and women who lived and worked in grim secrecy to hasten the end of the war." It is the story of stressful lives, cryptic conversations between husbands and wives, leaky faucets and water shotrages, censored mail, and sharing a post office box with every other person in town PO Box 1663, Santa Fe, NM. Life was filled with difficulties, but it was also filled with determination to overcome the hardships and reach a goal. Tying it all together was a sense of pride, of patriotism, and communal spirit that surpassed anything they knew before or after those days of the Manhattan Project.
  • The Sword & the Pen: A Life of Lew Wallace

    Ray E. Boomhower

    Hardcover (Indiana Historical Society, Sept. 1, 2005)
    From fighting for the cause of freedom during the Civil War to writing of one of the best-selling books of all time, Lew Wallace of Indiana enjoyed a remarkable career that touched the lives of such famous figures in American history as Abraham Lincoln, Ulysses S. Grant, Mark Twain, James Garfield, James Whitcomb Riley, and Billy the Kid.The ups and downs of WallaceÂ’s amazing days are told in this new biography for young readers. Written by award-winning Hoosier historian and author Ray E. Boomhower, The Sword and the Pen: A Life of Lew Wallace, includes numerous photographs and illustrations of Wallace and the people he met and events he participated in during his lifetime. The book also features information on historic places related to WallaceÂ’s life and times.Growing up when much of Indiana was still a wilderness, Wallace frequently fled from his classroom studies to wander the woods and fields he loved. The son of an Indiana governor, Wallace became passionate about books and combat. He tried to win lasting fame through service for the Union cause on the battlefield during the Civil War, but instead won honor and glory through a quieter pastime: writing. His novel Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ, became one of the countryÂ’s best-loved books and was made into two successful Hollywood films.At various times in his life, Wallace also was a lawyer, an Indiana state senator, vice president of the court-martial that tried the conspirators behind the assassination of President Lincoln, governor of the New Mexico Territory during the days of outlaw Billy the Kid, and a diplomat who represented the United States in Turkey.Wallace dreamed always of glory and lived a life full of adventures, triumphs, and tragedies. Through it all, he believed in himself and was never afraid to accept new challenges. He remains one of the most colorful and important figures in the Hoosier StateÂ’s history.
  • Captured! A Boy Trapped in the Civil War

    Mary Blair Immel

    Paperback (Indiana Historical Society, Sept. 1, 2005)
    Fourteen-year-old Johnny Ables, pressed into service in the Confederate army, is forced to participate in a major Civil War battle and ends up in an Indiana prison camp. Based on the true story of a real boy.
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  • Rye's Battle of the Century: Saving the New Hampshire Seacoast from Olympic Oil

    Lisa Moll

    Paperback (Rye Historical Society, June 5, 2016)
    This book was inspired by town of Rye resident Lisa Moll’s University of New Hampshire research paper entitled “Rye’s Ode to Olympic Oil,” which demonstrated the crucial role Rye played in stopping Olympic Oil’s 1974 effort to build the largest oil refinery in the world on Great Bay in Durham, New Hampshire. Rye blocked the Olympic effort to secure a marine terminal on the New Hampshire Isles of Shoals to receive crude oil and the pipelines needed to transport oil for refining inland. Lisa’s paper, part of which was researched at the Rye, New Hampshire, Town Museum, also provides a full overview of the role of Durham, New Hampshire and other seacoast NH towns in the defeat of the refinery. The Rye Historical Society (RHS) is grateful to all the people who fought tirelessly to save the coastline of New Hampshire from exploitation. Particular thanks is given to the late Guy Chichester of Rye who fought the proposal tirelessly and donated his collection of material to the Town museum, and to Jessie Herlihy, founder of the Rye Historical Society in 1976, who held anti-refinery meetings in her home in 1973-74. Also key in the battle to save the NH Seacoast was Phyllis Bennett, publisher of the start-up community newspaper, Publick Occurrences, which broke the story that Olympic Oil was planning an oil refinery complex for the Seacoast of New Hampshire. Phyllis led a relentless effort to inform and connect the Seacoast community with facts, and bring the truth of the proposed oil refinery complex out of the shadows of the governor’s office and into the light for all to see. This was at a time when NH's largest newspaper, The Manchester Union Leader, and the then governor of New Hampshire, Meldrim Thomson, siding with Aristotle Onassis, were all championing and supporting the building of the oil refinery. On the fortieth anniversary of the oil refinery defeat in 2014, Dudley Dudley, who helped spearhead the defeat of the proposal in Durham and in the New Hampshire legislature, gave a talk in Rye. Peter Horne, one of the key Rye activists against the refinery, spoke about his role in the defeat. Peter’s reflections are included in this book, along with other Rye activists. We are forever grateful to the two elderly sisters, Bernice Remick and Frances Tucker, who refused repeated exhorbitant offers to sell their 42-acre farm to Olympic Oil. Their farm on Brackett Rd. in Rye was directly in the path of the proposed pipeline, and in their refusal to sell, the entire Oil Refinery deal came to a halt. Later, the sisters sold their land to Rye Conservation Commission for a mere $12,000. This essay is dedicated to all the people who had the passion and courage to protect and preserve the Seacoast community for future generations. They took on the mighty and the powerful in the “battle of the century.”
  • The Fables of Aesop

    Aesop, Joseph Jacobs, Richard Heighway

    Paperback (New-York Historical Society, March 28, 2013)
    Eighty-two of Aesop's classic fables are gathered here, ""Selected, Told Anew, and their History Traced"" by Joseph Jacobs. Profusely and beautifully illustrated by Richard Heighway, this edition was originally published in 1894. The book includes a set of notes at the back, summing up the provenance of each fable.
  • Prince Estabrook, Slave and Soldier

    Alice Hinkle

    Paperback (Lexington Historical Society, April 1, 2001)
    The National Council on the Social Studies will present "Prince Estabrook" with the 2002 Carter G. Woodson Book Award (middle school division) at the NCSS annual meeting in Nov. NCSS awards go to the most distinguished social science books depicting ethnicity in the United States appropriate for young people.
  • Abstracts of the Records of the Society of Friends in Indiana, Volume 2

    Thomas D. Hamm, Ruth Dorrel

    Hardcover (Indiana Historical Society, June 15, 1999)
    Volume 2 includes records from monthly Society of Friends (Quakers) meetings in Wayne County, Indiana, not covered in volume 1, as well as records from Salem and Silvercreek/Salem meetings in Union County. Important Quaker materials such as meeting minutes, birth and death records, marriage records, removal certificates, and disownments are included.
  • Yours: The Civil War, a Love Triangle, and the Steamboat Sultana

    Lila Jeanne Elliott Sybesma

    Paperback (Indiana Historical Society, March 1, 2019)
    This historical fiction novel is told in two voices: Sarah and Joseph.Sarah Sutton and brothers Gabe and Joseph Elliott grew up together in 1860s rural Indianapolis. As teenagers, the brothers vie for Sarah s attention, but their attempts are disrupted when they both enlist in the Union army. Sarah also joins the war effort when she follows her father, a surgeon, to tend wounded soldiers in a regimental hospital. At the close of the war, the childhood friends unite on the Sultana, a steamboat returning thousands of Union soldiers home from the South. Tragedy strikes when the boilers explode, and the fiery vessel sinks in the Mississippi River. Will the three survive?
  • The Secret Project Notebook

    Carolyn Reeder

    Paperback (Los Alamos Historical Society, Sept. 1, 2005)
    Fritz has just arrived in a place so secret it isn't shown on any map. Even mentioning its name is forbidden. Mail is censored. Visitors are not allowed. A young boy moves to a remote spot in New Mexico, the site of a heavily guarded government laboratory, which stirs his curiosity. Exactly what are his father and the other scientists working on at the lab? With the help of Kathy, his seventh grade classmate, Fritz searches for clues, and evades bullies who have it in for him. He records each observation and rumor in a notebook he doesn't dare let out of his sight.
  • The Titanic Commutator: The Official Journal of the Titanic Historical Society, Inc.: Volume 22, Number 1, 1st Quarter, May 1998-July 1998

    The Titanic Historical Society, Ken Marschall

    Paperback (Titanic Historical Society, March 15, 1998)
    "Special Canada Issue"