Product Type
Condition
Binding
Collectible Attributes
Free Shipping
Seller Location
Seller Rating
Published by Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick, New Jersey, 1996
ISBN 10: 081352282XISBN 13: 9780813522821
Seller: About Books, Henderson, NV, U.S.A.
Book First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Near Fine condition. Dust Jacket Condition: No jacket, probably as issued. First Edition. New Brunswick, New Jersey: Rutgers University Press, 1996. Near Fine condition. Brief gift note on endpaper. A square, tight copy. Sharp corners. Pages are fresh and crisp. NO underlining. NO highlighting. NO margin notes. NO remainder mark. Hardcover. First Edition. Illustrated throughout with vintage photographs, maps, and prints. Includes a 19-page bibliography. Index. Bound in the original green cloth, stamped in shiny gold on the spine. According to Kirkus Reviews, this is a "diverting collection of Delaware River lore, from freelance writer and local historian Dale. The Delaware River never was one of the nation's great commercial waterways: too many rapids, too little water for that. Its claim to fame rests largely with George Washington's crossing on that blizzardy Christmas night in 1776, headed for Trenton and an engagement with a few hundred besotted Hessians. But Dale knows there is more to the river's history, and he serves it up in linear, storybook fashion. He starts as far back as the Lenni-Lenape natives and their disastrous relations with the gathering swarms of Dutch, Swedish, and English settlers. From that sorry piece of the past, Dale moves to another: clear-cutting the riverbank's pine woods to feed the British admiralty's insatiable demand for timber. Great rafts of logs, the size of football fields, were floated downriver, and soon the riverine landscape was as denuded as the English hillsides. Dale goes into great detail describing the Revolutionary War battles waged along the Delaware; the development of various rivercraft, from the ore-bearing Durham boats (Washington's craft of choice), to Fitch's steam packetboat (predating Robert Fulton's by decades); and a nasty little Civil War prison located on Pea Patch Island, a Union rival to the grotesqueries of Andersonville. For latter years, Dale concentrates on the river's strange, cruel weather -- the horrific floods (called 'freshets' in these parts) of 1841 and 1903, the sprawling devastation of Hurricane Diane in 1955, brutal ice storms. There is lots more: snippets, asides, vignettes, rumors, quick biographical sketches. And the river's cleaning up its act; Dale, in a measure of true devotion, even drinks from its waters. Homey history, like something your grandfather might have recited before the living room fire, a history in which the narrator has a stake.". First Edition. Hardcover. Near Fine condition/No jacket, probably as issued. 8vo. xiii, 203pp.
Published by Rutgers University Press, 1996
ISBN 10: 081352282XISBN 13: 9780813522821
Seller: ThriftBooks-Dallas, Dallas, TX, U.S.A.
Book
Hardcover. Condition: Good. No Jacket. Missing dust jacket; Pages can have notes/highlighting. Spine may show signs of wear. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less 1.11.
Published by Rutgers University Press, 1996
ISBN 10: 081352282XISBN 13: 9780813522821
Seller: GF Books, Inc., Hawthorne, CA, U.S.A.
Book
Condition: Good. Book is in Used-Good condition. Pages and cover are clean and intact. Used items may not include supplementary materials such as CDs or access codes. May show signs of minor shelf wear and contain limited notes and highlighting.