americathroughtime
americathroughtime
America Through Time
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Welcome to the Tumblr Page of America Through Time®—the all-new, full-color local history series from Fonthill Media LLC.
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americathroughtime · 8 years ago
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Available now: Girard and Lake City Through Time 
Order here » http://po.st/girardIn 1832, a new township was formed from land given by the Elk Creek, Fairview, and Springfield Townships...
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americathroughtime · 8 years ago
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⚾️🇺🇸🌴SPRING TRAINING WITH THE WASHINGTON NATIONALS Available now: po.st/nationals Viera, Florida, has been the spring training home for the Washington Nationals since the team's inception in 2005 and author Jim Maggiore has made the sojourn to Florida every year to watch the team get ready for the regular season. From Nick Johnson and Frank Robinson to Jayson Werth and Matt Williams, this book captures the Nationals in action through the years, not only on the diamond of Space Coast Stadium, but also on the backfields of the Nationals' spring training site. The enthusiasm, optimism, and insouciance of spring are delivered in these pages, as well as suggestions for getting the most out of a visit to Viera. Nationals fan or not, you will greatly appreciate this work; through its spring training stories and more than 200 photographs, it captures the intimacy and charm of baseball's spring training season. » ORDER HERE
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americathroughtime · 8 years ago
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🇺🇸🏠📕SOMERVILLE THROUGH TIME and its historic photos provide a glimpse into the life of our village and the people of a century ago and, through comparison with modern views, show the growth of our borough. George Washington lived in Somerville for six months (December 11, 1778, to June 3, 1779) during the Middlebrook Cantonment of the American Revolution. Although Somerville was settled in colonial times primarily by the Dutch who purchased land from the English proprietors of the colony, our "then" photos will focus mainly on the village in the late 1800s and early 1900s. The early village grew up around a church, courthouse and a tavern built at a crossroads shortly after the American Revolution. No one knows who gave Somerville its name, but it was known by this name by about 1800. Somerville grew rapidly after the completion of the railroad in the 1840s and the development of water power along the Raritan River in the 1850s. In 1909, Somerville formally separated from Bridgewater Township and became and independent borough. The town celebrated its Centennial Anniversary in 2009. ORDER HERE
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americathroughtime · 8 years ago
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You can now follow our American imprint - America Through Time - on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/americathroughtime/
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americathroughtime · 8 years ago
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We recommend: 🏡🌿🌴📙THE BOTANICAL GARDENS OF SOUTHERN FLORIDA THROUGH TIME Pre-order here: po.st/gardens-FL While gardens have been around since the beginning of time, botanical gardens―gardens designed for studies and education―first began in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries as the physic, or medicinal, gardens of Italy. It wasn’t until 1859 that the first botanical garden, the Missouri Botanic Garden, was established in the United States. There are approximately 1,775 botanic gardens and arboreta in 148 countries around the world. Hundreds can be found in the United States, while in Florida, there are nearly fifty of significance. Botanical gardens that often began with just a few seeds and cuttings grow into places of scientific significance where studies can be documented. These gardens are crucial for conservation efforts, and they also provide enjoyment to visitors who come to see their splendor. In this book, a few of the notable botanic gardens located in the State of Florida will be explored to see how they began, how they have evolved, and what they may look like in the future. The integral role they play in helping educate the public and how they work to preserve the environment will be examined in order to bring public awareness to the importance of these magnificent botanic gardens. ORDER HERE
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americathroughtime · 8 years ago
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🇺🇸🏚🏛NEW JERSEY’S COLONIAL ARCHITECTURE TOLD IN 100 BUILDINGS Read more » po.st/colonial-nj New Jersey celebrated its 350th birthday in 2014 and what better way to mark the occasion than to delve into its rich colonial past in NEW JERSEY’S COLONIAL ARCHITECTURE TOLD IN 100 BUILDINGS. Today, in this most developed and crowded of states, a surprising number of buildings are still standing from our Colonial Era, 1636 to 1783. They range from a Royal Governor's mansion in Perth Amboy; to Sandy Hook Lighthouse in Monmouth County; to Christ Episcopal Church in Shrewsbury; to the still functioning Black Horse Inn in Mendham; to a law office in Salem City; to Moravian Gristmill in Hope; to the nation's oldest farm building in Greenwich. New Jersey's extensive architectural heritage is often overshadowed by its neighbors-Philadelphia and New York City-but the Garden State has more varied every-day colonial architecture than any other state because it was the most diverse colony settled by Swedes, Dutch, Scotch, French, English Quakers, and others who brought their architectural traditions with them. The book tells the story of this rich colonial architecture heritage in more than 100 color photographs and captions...
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americathroughtime · 8 years ago
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For the Military History enthusiasts: GOAT ISLAND AND THE U.S. NAVAL TORPEDO STATION - GUNCOTTON, SMOKELESS POWDER AND TORPEDOES is out now! Order here: po.st/goat-island Weak maritime nations have always sought to augment the strength of their coastal defenses and navies by the use of “diabolical” contrivances for destroying an invader’s ships. The history of the adoption of the torpedo as a recognized implement of warfare is not unlike that of gunpowder or of exploding shells. Each in its turn was met by the cry, “Inhuman, barbarous, unchivalrous.” During the American Civil War, the Confederate Navy employed submerged mines, called torpedoes, and explosive charges mounted on a long pole referred to as the “spar torpedo” which was bumped into the hull of an enemy vessel exploding on contact. These weapons enjoyed great success during the conflict. In July 1869, the Secretary of the Navy announced the establishment of the Naval Torpedo Station on Goat Island in the harbor of Newport, Rhode Island, for development of a more sophisticated and deadlier self-propelled torpedo. From its founding until the end of the Second World War, the Naval Torpedo Station has been the Navy’s principal center for the design of torpedoes. Newport continues as the home of the U.S. Navy’s most important laboratory for research and development of modern weapons’ systems. ORDER HERE
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americathroughtime · 8 years ago
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⚾️SPRING TRAINING WITH THE METS IN PORT ST. LUCIE By Jim Maggiore Order now » po.st/the-mets Since 1988 the New York Mets have used Port St. Lucie (a.k.a. “St. Lucie”) as their spring training home. Loyal fans from Flushing and beyond have made an annual trek to the bucolic backfields of St. Lucie to literally walk in the footsteps of their baseball heroes. The theme of loyalty and patience fill these pages, as we take a pictorial history of the Mets in St. Lucie. Though undergoing some change through the years, the fields of St. Lucie have remained mostly unchanged, while the Mets have migrated through a variety of managing styles, ranging from the brashness of Davey Johnson, Dallas Green, and Bobby Valentine, to the humble demeanors of Jeff Torborg and Art Howe, to the humor-filled reign of Jerry Manuel, who became adept at substituting jokes for wins during his years managing the Mets. Today Terry Collins is at the helm of the team and for only the second time since training at St. Lucie, the team enters 2016 spring training fresh off an appearance in the World Series! While the post September 11th 2001 era ushered in increased privacy for the players, the St. Lucie complex still ranks extremely high in “fan friendliness.” In turning these pages, you not only revisit the Mets of yesteryear, but you also get a glimpse of the changing nature of the game, as well as the changing face of the nation.
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americathroughtime · 8 years ago
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🇺🇸🛤🚄CALIFORNIA'S LUMBER SHORTLINE RAILROADS by Jeff Moore Read more » po.st/cali-lumber California's sawmill and railroad industries grew up together, each at least partially depending upon the other for survival. However, not all of the Golden State's sawmills lay upon the routes of mainline railroads, resulting in the development of a number of shortline railroads connecting remote sawmills with the nation's rail network. In addition to serving the lumber industry, these shortlines often became economic lifelines to other industries in rural parts of the state. Many of these railroads also carried passengers, either as part of their common carrier service in the early years and/or as tourists in recent decades. This book seeks to tell the stories of and relate the important historical roles these small carriers played, long lasting companies such as the Almanor, Amador Central, Arcata & Mad River, California Western, Camino Placerville & Lake Tahoe, McCloud River, Quincy, Sierra, and Yreka Western, along with younger start-ups such as the Eureka Southern, North Coast, Great Western, Modoc Northern, Lake County, Lake Railway, and others. ORDER HERE
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americathroughtime · 8 years ago
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WOODSTOCK THROUGH TIME available now! Nestled between Mount Tom and Mount Peg, Woodstock Vermont resides along the Ottaquechee River like an indulged child between two parents. Woodstock is endowed with rare natural beauty enhanced by the absence of visible electric lines and historic preservation efforts maintain the quaint vintage appearance of Woodstock and surrounding communities. Although continuously in motion, life here seems more relaxed than many other communities. A host of cultural events, many revolving around the central green, blend with an active artistic community to keep Woodstock interesting. Idyllic Woodstock has so much charm and character that it is constantly being rediscovered as a dream village to live in and visit. ORDER HERE
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americathroughtime · 8 years ago
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For the latest America Through Time titles click here
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americathroughtime · 8 years ago
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We recommend: 🏛⛪️⚰GARDENS OF STONE - THE CEMETERIES OF NEW YORK CITY FROM COLONIAL TIMES TO THE PRESENT They are found in tiny parcels of land squeezed among Manhattan buildings and in large rolling tracts of land in Brooklyn, Queens and the Bronx. New York City's cemeteries carry on the ancient tradition of memorializing the dead with monuments, from plain gray markers to imposing crypts. Whatever their size, they tell the story of the city's evolution – it's triumphs, tragedies and setbacks – as it became a global capital. ORDER HERE
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americathroughtime · 8 years ago
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Available now: 🇺🇸🛩U.S. NAVY-CURTISS FLYING BOAT NC-4 - An Account of the First Transatlantic Flight  ORDER HERE Of the four Navy-Curtiss designed and built flying boats, only the NC-4, after many mechanical failures, was the only plane to complete its mission. Includes 66 black-and-white illustrations
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americathroughtime · 8 years ago
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🌉🏗📘The absolutely amazing large-format CARQUINEZ BRIDGE 1927-2007 is published later this month. You can pre-order your copy on Amazon here.
On May 21, 1927 the Carquinez Bridge opened to traffic between Crockett and Vallejo, California. Just a few miles North of San Francisco, the Carquinez Bridge was the longest highway bridge in the U.S. when it opened. It was also the first bridge across any part of the San Francisco Bay. The reason you have never heard of this magnificent bridge is because its opening was upstaged by Charles Lindbergh’s landing in Paris! For most of its working life the Carquinez Bridge lived in the shadow of its more famous siblings: the Oakland Bay Bridge and the mighty Golden Gate Bridge. Still, the Carquinez Bridge was an engineering triumph. Designed by the great engineer David Steinman, the mighty Carquinez was built using new construction techniques and was the first bridge to use earthquake buffers in the design. A second twin Bridge was opened in 1958 and third replacement bridge was opened in 2003. From 2005 through 2007 the old bridge was deconstructed in reverse order of its construction. In this book John V. Robinson takes readers on a photographic journey through time as he documents the birth, life, and death of one of America’s great bridges.
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americathroughtime · 8 years ago
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🎁📘🚎Ideal as a present or to browse through at leasure: TROLLEYS OF PENNSYLVANIA by Kenneth C. Springirth is available to order here. Trolleys of Pennsylvania is a photographic essay covering trolley car systems in Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania had more operating trolley companies than any other state in the United States. Fairmount Park in Philadelphia was the first park in the world to have a trolley car line located entirely within the park. Johnstown, Pennsylvania, was the smallest city in the United States to place in service new modern Presidents' Conference Committee cars. Until Philadelphia's Route 62 (Darby-Yeadon) was combined with Route 13 in 1971, Route 62 was the shortest trolley car line in the United States. This book provides an insight into a variety of trolley car lines that have contributed to Trolleys of Pennsylvania.
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americathroughtime · 8 years ago
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🍯🎁📚IT'S JUST DIRT: THE HISTORIC ART POTTERIES OF NORTH CAROLINA'S SEAGROVE REGION  Located near the geographic heart of North Carolina, Seagrove is known as the pottery town. Though not the only place where pottery has been made in the state, when you say Seagrove to people, they suspect that you’re talking about pottery. From its modest 18th century beginnings with a few Quaker potters from Pennsylvania and Nantucket, the Seagrove region today hosts more than one hundred potters. This is its history.
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americathroughtime · 8 years ago
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This winter - get cosy with your favorite America Through Time® books.
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