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5 results for The State Vol. 13 Issue 10, Aug 1945
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Record #:
14514
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Abstract:
Recent hurricanes brought to light for a brief period the remains of several vessels, buried in the sands for many years off the coast of North Carolina.
Source:
The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 13 Issue 10, Aug 1945, p1-3, 16, f
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Record #:
14515
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A little second-hand shop is doing its part toward aiding the war stricken peoples of Europe, the servicemen and their families in the United States and the American Red Cross.
Source:
The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 13 Issue 10, Aug 1945, p7, 21
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Record #:
14516
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The rise of the Farmers Alliance was due primarily to the desperate financial plight of the farmer. The Alliance sought relief not only for the political ills from which agriculture suffered but from economic ills as well.
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The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 13 Issue 10, Aug 1945, p9, 21-22
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Record #:
14517
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Abstract:
Ashwood, the home of the Bartrams, stands unnoticed by many people on their way to Wilmington, and yet its story and the story of the people who built it are interesting ones.
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The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 13 Issue 10, Aug 1945, p20-21
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Record #:
20420
Author(s):
Abstract:
Last September's hurricanes uncovered the remains of several vessels that had been buried in the and for many years on the state's Outer banks. The wrecks stretch from Hatteras Island down to Ocracoke. As usual it is a fleeting exposure as winds and sand again begin to cover the wrecks. Among the most interest are the ghost ship, the Carroll A. Deering; the Aristo, a British tramp steamer sunk in 1899; and the George W. Wells, the first six-masted schooner ever built, and at that time the largest wooden vessel afloat. She went down in 1913, and her remains had been buried on Ocracoke for a long time.
Source:
The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 13 Issue 10, Aug 1945, p1-3, il
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