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  • Spar 10%
    - The Voice of St. Louis
    av Frank Absher
    291,-

  • Spar 10%
  • Spar 10%
    av Needham Historical Society & Chaim M Rosenberg
    291,-

  • av Clarence Watkins
    366,-

  • av Bob Grenier
    366,-

  • - Civil War Collection
    av Savannah G Roberts & Anita L Roberts
    366,-

  • Spar 10%
    av Jessica Hutchings, Janet (McNeese State University) Allured & Debbie Johnson-Houston
    291,-

  • av Merab-Michal Favorite
    366,-

  • av Debra Carrington Polston & Mike Polston
    366,-

  • Spar 10%
    av Patsy Pipkin & Carolyn Boyles
    291,-

  • av Heather Jones Skaggs
    366,-

    The community of Bluff Park is home to a variety of residents, ranging from retirees to working families. Historically speaking, Bluff Park was first developed as a mountain resort and summer vacation site. Gardner Cole Hale bought the mountain property in the 1860s and called it Hale Springs. One of the first recorded uses of the name Bluff Park was with the Bluff Park Hotel, built in 1907. After its resort days, the area became more residential. Several of the founding families in Bluff Park settled on the mountain, building homes and farms. One such family, the Hales, ran a lumber mill, a cotton gin, and an icehouse. The Tyler family ran a large dairy farm after they moved to the area around 1888. The community school started around 1899 as a one-room schoolhouse and church, and Bluff Park Elementary is now one of the top elementary schools in the city of Hoover.

  • Spar 10%
    av Donovin Arleigh Sprague
    291,-

  • Spar 10%
    av Dawn M McMillan, Joseph F Munroe & David a Gardner
    291,-

    Gadsden County became Florida's fifth county in 1823, two years after the territory was formally acquired from Spain. Named for James Gadsden, the aide-de-camp to Andrew Jackson, Gadsden County has attracted people for centuries. From prehistoric Indian settlements and Spanish explorers to land acquisitions of the Forbes Purchase, the county has long been a magnet. Its mystique includes the "Coca-Cola Legend," shade tobacco, and ties to two popular books about the South: Gone with the Wind and Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil.

  • av John M. Olinskey & Leigh Ann Little
    366,-

  • Spar 10%
    av Kathal Bales, Pauline Hodges & Harold Kachel
    291,-

    Although there is evidence that prehistoric people lived in the area, Texas County did not officially exist until the area comprising No Man's Land, the Neutral Strip, and later Cimarron Territory was tacked onto Oklahoma at statehood in 1907. For the 70 years prior, the area belonged to no state or nation, and for 70 years it was a haven for those who chose not to abide by the law, as well as some good folks who established ranches and small villages. The area drastically changed with the arrival of railroads at the beginning of the 20th century, causing the creation of new towns and the influx of homesteaders who created a whole new culture. From these humble beginnings, the area has grown to become a leader in gas production and hog farms, as well as a home for prosperous ranches and a packing plant.

  • av M Rachel, PhD Gholson & Mara W Cohen Ioannides
    366,-

    Jews arrived to the bustling town of Springfield shortly after its founding in 1838, only five years after the birth of the state of Missouri. The first Jews to live in Springfield were Victor and Bertha Sommers with her brother Ferdinand Bakrow. They opened Victor Sommers & Co., a dry goods store in 1860. The Jewish community grew as merchants brought their families, tying Springfield to other towns along the Mississippi River through marriages. The first congregation was founded in 1893 by the German Reform Jews. In 1918, the Eastern European Jews founded their Orthodox congregation. In the 1940s, the two merged. Unlike other small Jewish communities that have slowly perished because of their children's migration to larger Jewish communities where they could use their education, this Jewish community in the Ozarks continues to thrive because of the universities and hospitals in the region.

  • Spar 10%
    av Nicole C Lindsay
    291,-

  • Spar 10%
    av Phyllis Codling McLaughlin
    291,-

  • Spar 10%
    av John R, Joseph Y DeSpain, Timothy Q Hooper & m.fl.
    291,-

  • av Michael W R Davis
    366,-

  • Spar 10%
    av James E Khoury & Gilda E Stanbery
    291,-

  • av Barbara S Bryant & William S Bryant
    366,-

  • av Harry George Spirides
    366,-

  • Spar 10%
    - The Big 97
    av Steve Clem
    291,-

    KAKC AM 970 dominated radio listening in Tulsa, Oklahoma, like no other station before or since. During its heyday, half of all radios in northeast Oklahoma were tuned to this Top 40 station. The "new" KAKC emerged in 1956 with a baby-boom generation raised on rock and roll, the twist, and transistor radios. But it was more than music that kept KAKC on top throughout the turbulent 1960s, Vietnam, and into the 1970s--it was fun! The station was always out doing something entertaining in the community, usually to benefit a charity, and the Big 7 deejays--including Scooter Segraves, Dick Schmitz, and Lee Bayley--became household names. The images in Tulsa's KAKC Radio chronicle the station's entire history, from its beginnings in the Coliseum to its long ride as the dominant force in Tulsa radio.

  • av Robin L Comeau in Cooperation with the T, Merrill Historical Society Inc & Robin L Comeau in Cooperation with the
    366,-

  • Spar 10%
    av Fork Shoals Historical Society
    291,-

  • av Kim A Evans
    366,-

    Located in the extreme northwest corner of Missouri and bordered by Nebraska and Iowa, Atchison County was named for Civil War Maj. Gen. David Rice Atchison, whose biggest claim to fame is that he was president of the United States for one day. Native American tribes such as the Potawatomi, Ioway, Sac, and Fox all passed through this area or called Atchison County home. After the Louisiana Purchase, settlers began their trek west, and Atchison County was a major crossroads as it was bounded on the west by the Missouri River. The county was divided into townships, and three of them, Bluff, Tarkio, and Polk, lost at least half of their land in what was claimed later by the State of Iowa in the Honey War, a bloodless territorial conflict. Agriculture has always been a way of life in Atchison County; in 1877, the county assessor reported over 1,600 mules, 49,000 swine, and 6,700 horses. Today, Atchison County boasts many self-employed farmers and ranchers, as well as a swine-breeding facility that employs 65 people. In addition, it has an 18-bed hospital, three public schools, three newspapers, two wind farms with 100 wind turbines, and many other businesses.

  • Spar 10%
    av Arthur H Miller, Shirley M Paddock & Susan L Kelsey
    291,-

  • av Arnold G Parks
    366,-

  • Spar 10%
    av Bob Grenier & Glorianne Seymour Fahs
    291,-

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