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Showing 37–48 of 53 results
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$16.00
The interesting history of the planned manufacturing community located “across the tracks” from Charles Town. Laid out by the Charlestown Mining, Manufacturing, and Improvement Company, the streets are named even today from the original town map.
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$13.95
For A to Z, this book covers everything one might want to know about the Black Union soldiers.
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$48.00
This 430-page large format full color book includes photographs of all the horses, races, jockeys, etc. covering the biggest annual race for WV bred horses.
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$10.00
Reprint of 2005 publication by the Jefferson County Black History Preservation Society facilitate by Bob O’Connor books/ The story of one of John Brown’s black raiders. Out-of-print until this month. ALl proceeds go to the Jefferson County Black History Preservation Society..
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$25.00
Only book ever written by Abraham Lincoln’s personal bodyguard, Ward Hill Lamon, a man who was born in Summit Point, Jefferson County, VA (now West Virginia).
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$22.00
Story of the preparation, raid, capture, trial, and execution of abolitionist John Brown including the never before told story of the raiders who got away.
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$22.00
No — John Wilkes Booth did not go to trial. He was killed fleeing authorities. But what if there was a trial? Read the plea from Booth’s attorney Clarence Darrow. Read the testimony of famous witnesses such as Samuel Clemens (aka Mark Twain), Aristotle, and William Shakespeare. How will things turn out for Booth?
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$22.00
The fourth in my trial series of men who didn’t go to trial…and what might have happened. Col. Dixon Miles was the commanding officer of the troops defending Bolivar Heights at Harpers Ferry on September 15, 1862 — just two days before the much more famous Battle of Antietam. Miles surrendered over 12,000 Union soldiers,…
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$22.00
At the end of the Civil War, Jefferson Davis was arrested and held in prison for about two years. But no trial was ever completed. The federal government feared secession would be discussed and perhaps been found legal, which would have been quite an embarrassment after a four-year long war. Here’s what might have happened.
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$22.00
Oswald did not go to trial for the assassination of President John Kennedy — he was shot in the jail by Jack Ruby. What would happen if he went to trial today? Could the prosecution prove him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt??
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$22.00
Fictional account of the trial of Confederate General Nathan Bedford Forrest for the atrocities his men committed at Fort Pillow in 1864
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$12.00
The untold story of the 105 black soldiers incarcerated in the Confederate stockade at Andersonville, Georgia, the most notorious of all Civil War prisons.