Yourowquains, a Wyandot Indian Queen


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In 1792, Caty Sage, a 5-year old white girl was kidnapped from Virginia by Cherokees & taken to Ohio. At 17 she married the Wyandot Chief. At 28 she was widowed & recieved a big land tract. She then married a Wyandot warrior who became a chief & famous preacher. In 1843 her tribe was driven from Ohio. They traveled in wagons across Ohio then in steamboats to Kansas. She had forgotten her childhood but a brother discovered her 56 years later. (80 illustrations).




Dark River Passage


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Beyond Their Years


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Beyond Their Years tells the life stories of five Native Canadian women, reconstructed using a variety of historical sources. Each biography is drawn from a different native culture, spread geographically from Saskatchewan to Newfoundland; collectively the stories cover the period from 1656 to 1992. This path breaking book shatters stereotypes by showing the power that native women had in their communities. The images of squaw and Indian princesses can now be replaced by a more realistic view of women diverse in personality and life history. Readers of this book will findthe variety and richness of these women's lives to be truly absorbing. Beyond Their Years describes the struggles of each woman to preserve and protect her community.




Forthcoming Books


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The Melungeons


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The Huron


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Examines the history, culture, and changing fortunes of the Huron Indians who made their home between Lake Huron and Lake Ontario.




A Cotton Mill Town Christmas


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The Indian-Queen


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Mountain Justice


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The old adage says ¿A watched pot never boils¿, but I feel there are also times when ¿An unwatched pot always boils over¿. Such was the case in Carroll County, Virginia at the turn of the twentieth century. By 1900 the water was simmering between the mostly Democratic Allens and the Republican led court system. Cries of illegalities from the Allens against the court officials were met with claims of Allen bullying that led to unfulfilled jail sentences. Heat was turned up in 1911 when nephews of the Allens were involved in a fight that ordinarily would have been interpreted as ¿boys being boys¿. Instead numerous charges were brought against the nephews, while no charges were brought by the parties that initiated the skirmish. The water reached a boiling point when the nephews were extradited in a manner in which the Allens felt was improper. New charges of interfering with the duties of an officer then resulted in numerous charges against the Allen men themselves. Although the Allens, and the court officials, had been in hot water before, it took a March day in 1912 for the pot to boil over and become what will forever be known as ¿The Carroll County Shootout¿. This is the story of the aftermath of that shooting. Follow Jeremiah Haynes, a Richmond journalist, as he comes to the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia to ¿find the truth,¿ a truth that no one wanted told.