Sam Deal and his horse, Ginger, help an African American lifesaving crew rescue shipwreck victims off the coast of North Carolina in 1896.
Focusing on a single important historic event, these books engage readers' interest and imagination. Written in story format, these books are fictionalized accounts of events that really happened.
Rear Admiral Carlton Moore tells the complete history of this daring rescue, including never-before-printed radio messages from the rescuers.
These are the stories of daring rescues, tragic failures, enduring mysteries, buried treasure, and fascinating legend.
Rear Admiral Carlton Moore tells the complete history of this daring rescue, including never-before-printed radio messages from the rescuers.
When ships were in trouble off the coast of North Carolina's Outer Banks, the courageous black life-savers at Pea Island Station were first on the scene -- and in the...
Two young girls move to the Outer Banks of North Carolina and learn about the ocean and life on the coast. There are four early chapter books in this collection, written for readers six- to nine-years-old.
Reconstruction , 20 , 122–26 , 142–43 , 170–73 , 175 , 178–81 , 183 , 199–201 , 231 Red Shirts , 180 Reed ... 17 , 125 , 162 , 299 Shaffer , J. Wilson , 89-90 Shallowbag Bay , N.C. , 121 , 128 Shawboro , N.C. , 56 Shenandoah campaign ...
From the Spanish Galleons laden with gold to the sinking of the Monitor to the German U-boat action off the east coast, this book is packed with fascinating stories.
In 1896, ten-year-old Sam Deal and Ginger, the wild horse he has tamed, assist an all-Black lifesaving crew as they attempt to rescue survivors of a shipwreck off North Carolina's Outer Banks.
The selections in An Outer Banks Reader span the course of more than four and a half centuries, from the first known record of a meeting between Europeans and Native Americans in the region in 1524 to modern-day accounts of life on the ...