The Walker Family Letters

The Walker Family Letters
Author: David Walker
Publisher:
Total Pages: 130
Release: 1956
Genre: Lawyers
ISBN:

David Walker, son of Jacob Wythe Walker and Nancy Hawkins, was born 19 Feb 1806 in Kentucky. He married Jane Lewis Washington, daughter of Rebecca Washington, in 1833 in Kentucky. They lived in Fayetteville, Arkansas where they had six children. The children and family members have lived in Arkansas, Texas, Illinois, Florida, Kentucky, and other areas in the United States.

The Walker Family Letters

The Walker Family Letters
Author: Washington County Historical Society (Ark.)
Publisher:
Total Pages: 194
Release: 1956
Genre:
ISBN:

David Walker, son of Jacob Wythe Walker and Nancy Hawkins, was born 19 Feb 1806 in Kentucky. He married Jane Lewis Washington, daughter of Rebecca Washington, in 1833 in Kentucky. They lived in Fayetteville, Arkansas where they had six children. The children and family members have lived in Arkansas, Texas, Illinois, Florida, Kentucky, and other areas in the United States.

The Vowel Family

The Vowel Family
Author: Sally M. Walker
Publisher: Carolrhoda Books
Total Pages: 44
Release: 2008
Genre: Juvenile Fiction
ISBN: 0822579820

The members of the Vowel family have a hard time talking until their children, Alan, Ellen, Iris, Otto, and Ursula, are born, and when one of them gets lost one day, it takes their Aunt Cyndy to fix the problem.

Letters from New Orleans

Letters from New Orleans
Author: Rob Walker
Publisher: Garrett County Press
Total Pages: 234
Release: 2010-08-16
Genre: Travel
ISBN: 1891053183

In January of 2000, Rob Walker left a high-powered media job in New York, and with his girlfriend, moved to New Orleans. Letters from New Orleans collects, in one volume, the delightful and unsettling observations Walker sent to friends and fans about his intriguing new life in New Orleans.

Can Anything Beat White?

Can Anything Beat White?
Author: Farah Jasmine Griffin
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2012-04-19
Genre:
ISBN: 9781617033209

A treasure trove of correspondence among novelist Ann Petry's ancestors Ann Petry (1908-1997) achieved prominence during a period in which few black women were published with regularity in America. Her novels Country Place (1947) and The Narrows (1988), along with various short stories and nonfiction, poignantly described the struggles and triumphs of middle-class blacks living in primarily white communities. Petry's ancestors, the James family, served as in-spiration for much of her fiction. This collection of more than four hundred family letters, edited by the daughter of Ann Petry, is an engaging portrait of black family life from the 1890s to the early twentieth century, a period not often documented by African American voices. Ann Petry's maternal grandfather, Willis Samuel James, was a slave taught by his children to read and write. He believed "the best place for the negro is as near the white man as he can get." He followed that "truth," working as coachman for a Connecticut governor and buying a house in a white neighborhood in Hartford. Willis had sixteen children by three wives. The letters in this collection are from him and his second wife, Anna E. Houston James, and five of Anna's children, of whom novelist Ann Petry's mother, Bertha James Lane, was the oldest. History is made and remade by the availability of new documents, sources, and interpretations. Can Anything Beat White? contributes a great deal to this process. The experiences of the James family as documented in their letters challenge both representations of black people at the turn of the century

Walker Family Letters

Walker Family Letters
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 138
Release: 2000
Genre: Jackson County (Ga.)
ISBN:

A group of 69 letters written between 1862 and 1931, 22 of which were written by Jane Lee White in Jackson County, GA to her son, Tilman Davis Oxford White, and other family members in Texas. The other 47 letters are between a variety of allied family members.