Three Pioneer Rapides Families


Book Description

Peter Robert, born ca. 1738-1740 came from Beaufort District, South Carolina He was a descendant of Pierre Robert who was born in St. Imier, Switzerland in 1656. He later settled in Mississippi and then Louisiana. His son-in-law was Robert Tanner who also originated from Beaufort District. William Pearce, born in North Carolina in 1754 went to Georgia in 1768 and later came to Louisiana in 1808. Descendants lived in Louisiana, Texas, and elsewhere.




Three Pioneer Rapides Families


Book Description

Peter Robert, born ca. 1738-1740 came from Beaufort District, South Carolina He was a descendant of Pierre Robert who was born in St. Imier, Switzerland in 1656. He later settled in Mississippi and then Louisiana. His son-in-law was Robert Tanner who also originated from Beaufort District. William Pearce, born in North Carolina in 1754 went to Georgia in 1768 and later came to Louisiana in 1808. Descendants lived in Louisiana, Texas, and elsewhere.




Three Pioneer Rapides Families


Book Description




Three Pioneer Families


Book Description




Forever Stalwart


Book Description

"Forever Stalwart" is a true-life account of three pioneer families, highlighting seven real-named main characters, and authenticating actual events with maps, photos, and original documents. The lives of Isaac Morley and Titus Billings were intertwined at every turn. One story cannot be told without the other. Likewise the Edward Tuttle story inserts essential insights. Their lives spanned the history of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints from its Kirtland beginnings, across the plains and all the way to the Sanpete Settlement of Manti, Utah. This book is unique because it uses the real names of real people to tell the real story.










Genealogies in the Library of Congress


Book Description

Vol 1 905p Vol 2 961p.







The Other American Dilemma


Book Description

In The Other American Dilemma, Rubén Donato and Jarrod Hanson examine the experiences of Mexican immigrants, Mexican Americans, and Hispanos/as in their schools and communities between 1912 and 1953. Drawing from the Mexican Archives located in Mexico City and by venturing outside of the Southwest, their examinations of specific communities in Arkansas, California, Colorado, Kansas, Louisiana, and Texas shed new light on Mexicans' social and educational experiences. Donato and Hanson maintain that Mexicans—whether recent immigrants, American citizens, or Hispanos/as with deep roots in the United States—were not seen as true Americans and were subject to unofficial school segregation and Jim Crow. The book highlights similarities and differences between the ways the Mexican-origin population and African Americans were treated. Because of their mestizo heritage, the Mexican-origin population was seen as racially mixed and kept on the margins of community and school life by people in power.