Beyond the Mountains
The railroad might be important, Marshall argued, but the salt supply was crucial. Carter's raid was deflected, and careful movement and positioning of Confederate defensive forces continued the following year.
Ibid., 169; William Bruce Wheeler and Michael J. McDonald, TVA and the Tellico Dam, 1936–1979: A Bureaucratic Crisis in Post-Industrial America (Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1986), 148–55. For a detailed look at opposition ...
These discrete stories are, however, linked through the power of conceptualizing nature and work together to reveal the ways in which ideas and uses of nature often created a sense of identity in Appalachia.
The journey of a Hmong family escaping war-torn Laos to Thailand refugee camps. Eventually the family was accepted to come to the United States of America.