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Green Mountain Cemetery, Boulder, Colorado, Index to Interment Books, 1904-2016

Green Mountain Cemetery, Boulder, Colorado, Index to Interment Books, 1904-2016
Author: Boulder Genealogical Society
Publisher: Lulu.com
Total Pages: 392
Release: 2016-07-18
Genre: History
ISBN: 1365265889

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Green Mountain Cemetery is one of the largest in Boulder County, Colorado, with more than 15,000 burials and memorials. The Boulder Genealogical Society has updated its 2006 edition of this book to include the burials of the last decade (through May 2016) and to make corrections to the earlier edition. Each burial has the name of the deceased, a birth date or age, a death date, a burial location and interment number.


The Genealogical Helper

The Genealogical Helper
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 892
Release: 1996
Genre: Genealogy
ISBN:

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The Lepine Girls of Mud City

The Lepine Girls of Mud City
Author: Evelyn Earl Geer
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing
Total Pages: 149
Release: 2019-12-09
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1614235686

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A biography of three sisters who grew up on the Vermont countryside, traveled the world, and returned to their farm to raise acclaimed cows. The Lepines’ story began in Quebec, from where Maurice and Imelda immigrated to Vermont during the Great Depression. The family farmed, lived off the rich Vermont landscape and instilled a love for it in their daughters, Gert, Jeanette and Therese. As adults, “the Girls” taught school, traveled the world and worked for President Johnson but never forgot their roots. All three returned to Mount Sterling Farm, raising their famed Jersey cows and embodying Vermont’s agricultural tradition. Their story is one of hope and valor—of a family who loved their home and neighbors and left their land as a lasting gift for the world. Praise for the Lepine Sisters “The Lepine sisters . . . are the doyennes of rural northern Vermont. The sisters, and the Jersey cows they have been milking, feeding and cleaning up after for more than four decades, are what many Vermonters regard as the real Vermont.” —New York Times


Till Death Do Us Part

Till Death Do Us Part
Author: Allan Amanik
Publisher: Univ. Press of Mississippi
Total Pages: 290
Release: 2020-03-18
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1496827902

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Contributions by Allan Amanik, Kelly B. Arehart, Sue Fawn Chung, Kami Fletcher, Rosina Hassoun, James S. Pula, Jeffrey E. Smith, and Martina Will de Chaparro Till Death Do Us Part: American Ethnic Cemeteries as Borders Uncrossed explores the tendency among most Americans to separate their dead along communal lines rooted in race, faith, ethnicity, or social standing and asks what a deeper exploration of that phenomenon can tell us about American history more broadly. Comparative in scope, and regionally diverse, chapters look to immigrants, communities of color, the colonized, the enslaved, rich and poor, and religious minorities as they buried kith and kin in locales spanning the Northeast to the Spanish American Southwest. Whether African Americans, Muslim or Christian Arabs, Indians, mestizos, Chinese, Jews, Poles, Catholics, Protestants, or various whites of European descent, one thing that united these Americans was a drive to keep their dead apart. At times, they did so for internal preference. At others, it was a function of external prejudice. Invisible and institutional borders built around and into ethnic cemeteries also tell a powerful story of the ways in which Americans have negotiated race, culture, class, national origin, and religious difference in the United States during its formative centuries.


Harriet Wilson's Our Nig

Harriet Wilson's Our Nig
Author: R. J. Ellis
Publisher: Rodopi
Total Pages: 232
Release: 2003
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9789042011571

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Harriet E. Wilson's Our nig (1859) is a startling tale of the mistreatment of a young African American mulatto woman, Frado, living in New England at a time when slavery, though abolished in the North, still existed in the South. Frado, a Northern free black', yet treated as badly as many Southern slaves of the time, is unforgettably portrayed as experiencing and resisting vicious mistreatment. To achieve this disturbing portrait, Harriet Wilson's book combines several different literary genres - realist novel, autobiography, abolitionist slave narrative and sentimental fiction. R.J. Ellis explores the relationship of Our nig to these genres and, additionally, to laboring class writing (Harriet Wilson was an indentured farm servant). He identifies the way Our nig stands as a double first: the first separately-published novel written in English by an African American female it is also one of the first by a member of the laboring class about the laboring class.