Our Roots Grow Deeper Than We Know

Our Roots Grow Deeper Than We Know
Author: Lee Gutkind
Publisher: Pittsburgh, Pa. : University of Pittsburgh Press
Total Pages: 320
Release: 1985
Genre: Fiction
ISBN:

Gathers stories and essays about Pennsylvania childhoods, cities, heritage, and state history.

The Pennsylvania People

The Pennsylvania People
Author: Rose Basile Green
Publisher: Associated University Press
Total Pages: 115
Release: 1984
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 9780845347812

Pennsylvania; a Guide to the Keystone State,

Pennsylvania; a Guide to the Keystone State,
Author: Best Books on
Publisher: Best Books on
Total Pages: 773
Release: 1940
Genre:
ISBN: 1623760372

compiled by workers of the Writers' Program of the Work Projects Administration in the state of Pennsylvania ... Co-sponsored by the Pennsylvania Historical Commission and the University of Pennsylvania.

One for All

One for All
Author: Trinka Hakes Noble
Publisher: Count Your Way Across the U.S.
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2005
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 9781585362004

"Using numbers many of Pennsylvania's state symbols, history, landscapes, and famous people are introduced. Topics include the Liberty Bell, fireflies, Gettysburg, Betsy Ross, and coal miners"--Provided by publisher.

The Indigo Scarf

The Indigo Scarf
Author: P J Piccirillo
Publisher: Brown Posey Press
Total Pages: 332
Release: 2019-06-15
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9781620061695

The Indigo Scarf chronicles the crossing lives of escaped slaves Jedediah James and George Sharpe as they flee with their white wives into the wilderness of Pennsylvania's Sinnemahone country, on the upper reaches of the West Branch of the Susquehanna River, during the frontier decades after Pennsylvania's last Indian purchase. The novel opens, however, in 1882 in Washington's Baltimore and Potomac Railroad station. Narrator Anna Maria Sharpe is departing for the backwoods of north-central Pennsylvania, which she fled in her teens doubtful of her identity. She encounters Benjamin James, now a drifting, alcoholic longshoreman, who'd been implicated in the murder of his brother during Anna Maria's childhood. Benjamin decides to join her on the journey. Along the way, we follow the tale of the founders of their sordid hideaway settlement: his father, the infamous ex-slave Jedediah James; George Sharpe, a former indentured grist-miller whom Anna Maria believes was her grandfather; and the white women they had escaped with to the wild Sinnemahone country, Sarah James and Rosanna Sharpe. Through the story, Anna Maria learns that the man Benjamin had been accused of murdering had been her father, and the murderer, her half-brother. Benjamin's account of the life of Jedediah James reveals a fatal obsession with ownership driving this freed slave toward his reckoning. Hostilities build to a head between James and his wife's father-the august revolutionary war veteran Samson Starret-as well as Sarah's ex-suitor, Williamsport's Thomas Tillman, a man fixated on this woman whom an ex-slave stole from him on the eve of their arranged marriage. The scenes of The Indigo Scarf take the reader from a plantation in Virginia's tidewater region to the tragic end of a whiskey and timber-pirating operation on the Susquehanna's un-peopled and feral West Branch during the frontier decades after Pennsylvania's last Indian purchase.