Bogue Genealogy

Bogue Genealogy

Author: Flora Lucinda Bogue Deming

Publisher:

Published: 1944

Total Pages: 370

ISBN-13:

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"John Booge (Bogue), the Immigrant Ancestor, came to Conn., and settled in East Haddam in 1680. He was b. 1661, Glassgow or Edinburgh, Scotland; d. Aug. 21, 1748, East Haddam, Conn.; m. Aug. 11, 1692, East Haddam, Conn., Rebeccca Walkley. He m. 2nd, May 1, 1733, East Haddam, Conn., Mrs. Elizabeth Boyle."--Page 1. "William Bogue, the first of the Bogues who settled in North Carolina b.--; d. 1720/21 at Perquimins Prct., N.C.; m. June 5, 1689 Ellender or Elinor Perisho ..."--Page 181. Descendants lived in Connecticut, Massachusetts, Ohio, North Carolina, California, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Illinois, South Dokota, Wisconsin, Kansas, Wyoming and elsewhere


Michigan’s War

Michigan’s War

Author: John W. Quist

Publisher: Ohio University Press

Published: 2019-03-26

Total Pages: 245

ISBN-13: 0821446282

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When it came to the Civil War, Michiganians never spoke with one voice. At the beginning of the conflict, family farms defined the southern Lower Peninsula, while a sparsely settled frontier characterized the state’s north. Although differing strategies for economic development initially divided Michigan’s settlers, by the 1850s Michiganians’ attention increasingly focused on slavery, race, and the future of the national union. They exchanged charges of treason and political opportunism while wrestling with the meanings of secession, the national union, emancipation, citizenship, race, and their changing economy. Their actions launched transformations in their communities, their state, and their nation in ways that Americans still struggle to understand. Building upon the current scholarship of the Civil War, the Midwest, and Michigan’s role in the national experience, Michigan’s War is a documentary history of the Civil War era as told by the state’s residents and observers in private letters, reminiscences, newspapers, and other contemporary sources. Clear annotations and thoughtful editing allow teachers and students to delve into the political, social, and military context of the war, making it ideal for classroom use.


Hearing the Voices of Jonestown

Hearing the Voices of Jonestown

Author: Mary McCormick Maaga

Publisher: Syracuse University Press

Published: 2020-02-25

Total Pages: 212

ISBN-13: 0815650469

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When over 900 followers of the Peoples Temple religious group committed suicide in 1978, they left a legacy of suspicion and fear. Most accounts of this mass suicide describe the members as brainwashed dupes and overlook the Christian and socialist ideals that originally inspired Peoples Temple members. Hearing the Voices of Jonestown restores the individual voices that have been erased so that we can better understand what was created—and destroyed—at Jonestown, and why. Piecing together information from interviews with former group members, archival research, and diaries and letters of those who died there, Maaga describes the women leaders as educated political activists who were passionately committed to achieving social justice through communal life. The book analyzes the historical and sociological factors that, Maaga finds, contributed to the mass suicide, such as growing criticism from the larger community and the influx of an upper-class, educated leadership that eventually became more concerned with the symbolic effects of the organization than with the daily lives of its members. Hearing the Voices of Jonestown puts human faces on the events at Jonestown, confronting theoretical religious questions, such as how worthy utopian ideals come to meet such tragic and misguided ends.


A Complement to Genealogies in the Library of Congress

A Complement to Genealogies in the Library of Congress

Author: Library of Congress

Publisher: Genealogical Publishing Com

Published: 2012-09

Total Pages: 1148

ISBN-13: 9780806316680

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Previously published by Magna Carta, Baltimore. Published as a set by Genealogical Publishing with the two vols. of the Genealogies in the Library of Congress, and the two vols. of the Supplement. Set ISBN is 0806316691.


The Farm on the North Talbot Road

The Farm on the North Talbot Road

Author: Allan G. Bogue

Publisher: U of Nebraska Press

Published: 2001-01-01

Total Pages: 252

ISBN-13: 9780803261891

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As the family farm of yesterday steadily loses ground to the corporate farm of tomorrow, pundits and plain folks alike bemoan the loss of the homely, down-to-earth rural life that few actually know or remember anymore. Allan G. Bogue is a notable exception. A legendary agricultural, political, and economic historian, and one of only three historians ever elected to the National Academy of Sciences, Bogue has for the last fifty years written about the political and economic forces shaping agriculture. And he himself has roots in the family farm?roots he traces in this memoir that is both a thoughtful tribute to the tradition that nurtured him and North America and an authentic, unsentimental portrait of the hard life that most have abandoned. Through descriptions of neighborly good will, adverse climate, charismatic family relations, and the seasonal tasks demanded by dairy farming, Bogue imparts the rhythms of growing up in rural Ontario in the early years of the twentieth century. Tracing the family's fortunes through the ups and downs of the economy in the 1920s and 1930s, he draws an absorbing picture of how they and their neighbors farmed, the crops they raised, the livestock they kept, the technology they used, and the stresses, strains, frustrations, sadness, joy, and triumphs they experienced. Firsthand history of a rare and moving sort, his book is at once an elegy for a disappearing way of life and a deftly realized, meticulously reconstructed chapter of North American history.