Oregon's Main Street: U.S. Highway 99 the Folk History - Pat Edwards - Books - Groundwaters Publishing, LLC - 9780996426107 - September 15, 2014
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Oregon's Main Street: U.S. Highway 99 the Folk History

Pat Edwards

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Oregon's Main Street: U.S. Highway 99 the Folk History

Publisher Marketing: In 1913, the first shovelful of dirt was turned by Oregon Governor Oswald West on the Siskiyou Pass to mark the beginning of the construction of the long-dreamed-of Pacific Highway through Oregon. At the time, the whole State of Oregon had only 25 miles of paved road. Even after construction of the highway had begun, it was mainly dirt and gravel for quite some time. Federal money did not pour into the project until 1921. Until that time, it was up to the individual counties along the route to come up with the funding to build the roads through each of their areas. By its completion in 1926, however, it was adopted as U. S. Highway 99 and was declared the longest improved highway in the country by 1928. Actually, the history of the highway began long before 1913. This book will cover how the route for the Pacific Highway was determined through its use by trappers and miners and eventually stage lines and the railroad. But, just importantly, it will show how each of the settlements along its route were formed and grew into prospering cities, small rural communities and some that are now considered ghost towns. Join us on our journey through these communities as we wend our way north from the California border where the Pacific Highway first started from that shovelful of dirt. You'll learn about some of the interesting, but lesser-known, aspects of their histories and the people who were instrumental in making them what they are today. Contributor Bio:  Edwards, Pat Muriel (Ava) Linder lives with her family in Elmira, Oregon. She spent many years studying Native American history, especially that related to the Cheyenne tribe, before writing "The White Man's Brother." After writing it and an unpublished sequel called "The Rainbow Chasers," the manuscripts were laid aside while she concentrated on developing a sewing and alterations business. She finally brought both books out of the closet and worked on them some more. "I had written numerous magazine articles and newspaper items up until that time, but working with fiction was a whole new ballgame. I loved bringing my characters to life!" "White Man's Brother" is the first of these two books. Look for "The Rainbow Chasers, a sequel to WMB, which will be published in late 2015. In her acknowledgements, Mrs. Linder writes: "If it were possible, I would thank George Bird Grinnell personally for the two volumes he wrote on the day-to-day happenings of a Cheyenne village. "Grinnell lived with the Cheyenne for several years and painstakingly recorded the period when they hunted the buffalo and roamed the prairie. This was before the buffalo hunters came. "My hero died in 1938 after a long career as a writer. He had a great love for Native American culture which he passed on to me."

Media Books     Paperback Book   (Book with soft cover and glued back)
Released September 15, 2014
ISBN13 9780996426107
Publishers Groundwaters Publishing, LLC
Pages 558
Dimensions 178 × 254 × 29 mm   ·   957 g

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