In nineteenth-century London, Will Clipson runs a betting house. When his customers accuse him of cheating, and the threats become dangerous, he decides a move is in order. After all, his friend Henry Jones left England for America three years ago. Henry Jones is a successful gas fitter who has lit the lamps of London parks, theaters, and shops. But he is ready for a change, and there is promise of much opportunity across the Atlantic. Will joins Henry and other English families-the Puzeys, the Bentleys, and the Churches and their friends and extended families-who have crossed the dangerous Atlantic Ocean to New York, and then made the eight hundred-mile journey inland to central Illinois to a place they know as Grand Prairie. It's a story history has forgotten: how this determined group settles in, and perhaps overwhelms, what becomes the township of Catlin. Henry's wealth earned in London allows him to relish his new situation as he buys up swaths of land. The Puzeys, Churches, Bentleys, and their friends also accumulate land, build houses, and break the tough, matted prairie soil. Will gathers land too, perhaps with ill-gotten gain. A few years after their arrival, the escalating Civil War threatens to take the immigrants' sons. What surprises lie around the corner? Discover the true narratives of these strong families' struggles, failures, and successes, in an immigration experience that has been waiting one hundred fifty years to be told.
Mr. Elder turned a nice profit by selling it to Gus A. Spivey for $225, who then sold the lot to Walter R. Stovall, ... Mrs. A. Howell, a 45-year-old mother of five daughters, had been adjudged insane in a Dallas courtroom earlier that ...
When I get upset she always calms me down. She never makes me sit near someone who would get me into trouble. ... Student Grand Prairie High School 9th Grade Center Mrs. Rodriguez The teacher that made a difference in my I Make a ...
This book is dedicated to Trudie for saving my life when she told me to turn and go home. We both could have gotten murdered that day, I also had a pocket full of money. I would not be alive today to write this book if that had happen.
This book is dedicated to Trudie for saving my life when she told me to turn and go home. We both could have gotten murdered that day, I also had a pocket full of money. I would not be alive today to write this book if that had happen.
Micajah Goodwin The Micajah Goodwin family was one of the first families to homestead in the Peters Colony, on a Republic of Texas land grant in the early 1840s. Mrs. Goodwin died just months after their arrival; she was the first white ...
“To hell with the trees.” She shoots me a warning look, but doesn't really mean it. She lets me keep the Zipper and the Gravitron and suggests a Ferris wheel, swings, Super Slide, the Hurricane, a merry-go- round, 116 Ken Wheaton.
The Grand Prairie Years: A Biography of W.C. Perry
A History of Grand Prairie: Pre 1840s-2009
As The First Annual Grand Prairie Rabbit Festival draws near, help comes from the strangest places.