قراءة كتاب The Stronghold: A Story of Historic Northern Neck of Virginia and Its People

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The Stronghold: A Story of Historic Northern Neck of Virginia and Its People

The Stronghold: A Story of Historic Northern Neck of Virginia and Its People

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 5
Speech 199 Shopping Trips 199 Menhaden 200 The Old Stone Pile 205 Keepers of the Light 205 The Headless Dog 207

PART IV—Conclusion

The Ancient Mansion Seats 213
Appendix 217
Sources 219

List of Illustrations

John Smith in the shallop exploring the waters of Northern Neck, Virginia 14
Henry Spelman living amongst the Indians 24
Pocahontas is traded for a copper kettle and becomes an hostage to Captain Argall 30
First settlers at Coan 36
"King" Carter attends Christ Church 96
Mary Ball at Yeocomico Church 116
The infant, George Washington at Wakefield, his birthplace 126
Young Washington helping in the handling of "seine" on the Potomac 128
Young George Washington becomes a friend of Lord Fairfax, Proprietor of Northern Neck 136
Young Robert E. Lee learning to ride 172
Skirmish between the Virginia Militia and the British during the War of 1812 at Farnham Church 176
"Yankee" foragers during the Civil War 182

Introduction

I have read with a great deal of pleasure the book called The Stronghold, which relates the history of the Northern Neck of Virginia in story form and was written by my good friend, Miriam Haynie of Reedville, Virginia. Mrs. Haynie is a native of the Northern Neck of Virginia, her family on both sides having settled there in the seventeenth century, and her direct ancestors having remained there until this day. She is the author of a number of articles dealing with the history and traditions and customs of the peninsula between the Rappahannock and Potomac Rivers that have appeared in the Richmond Times-Dispatch, the Washington papers and national publications. She is devoted to this section of Virginia and has spent a large part of her life in accumulating an enormous fund of historical data of the region.

The Stronghold is a most interesting book, especially to Virginians and to natives and descendants of natives of the Northern Neck of Virginia. It is divided into three sections, the seventeenth century, the eighteenth century and the nineteenth century. It tells a great deal about the early history of the Colony and more especially of that portion of the Colony of Virginia, of which she is a native, from the days when the white man first came to the Potomac and Rappahannock Rivers down to the beginning of the twentieth century. She relates in a most pleasing language the first visits of Captain John Smith to the waters surrounding the Northern Neck, also the capture of Princess Pocahontas by the colonists, which occurred on the Potomac River or on one of its tributaries, and many other events connected with our early history that we are prone to overlook in the rush and whirl of these modern days. Her book will be particularly interesting to children as it is written in simple language and in story form so that a child in the fifth grade may read and understand it. It is a most entertaining and interesting work and will impress upon children the early history of our part of the Colony of Virginia and the hardships endured by our ancestors who came here to settle in the wilderness. In saying that it will be particularly interesting to children I do not mean to restrict interest in the book entirely to children for it will be both interesting and educational to all lovers of history regardless of age.

As is true in all works of this kind some of the historical statements she has made will be open to contention but in the main it is a true and correct history of the Northernmost Peninsula of the Old Dominion and pays proper attention to

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