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  • - A Hiroshima POW Returns
    by T C Cartwright
    £14.99

    When the Lonesome Lady was shot down during a bombing run in the Inland Sea of Japan, Pilot T. C. Cartwright and his crew became POWs. The men were interned at Hiroshima, and while the author was sent to Tokyo for interrogation, his entire crew was killed by the U. S. atomic bomb. The military failed to properly report the death of his crew. This story was reported in the New York Times and in several newspaper articles, but for the first time the author tells the story in his own words.

  • - The History of Bull Riding
    by Gail Woerner
    £18.49

  • - The Largest Hotel Chain in Texas
    by Lon Bennett Glenn
    £21.49

  • - Episodes of Texas Rangers in the 20th Century
    by Ben Proctor & Professor of History Ben (Texas Christian University) Procter
    £16.99

  • - A Woman at West Point
    by Donna Peterson
    £18.49

  • - A Prosecutor's Journal
    by Dr John E & PH.D Clark
    £18.49

  • - The All-Black Towns of Oklahoma
    by Hannibal B. Johnson
    £16.99

  • - Snake-Killer Bird
    by Marilyn Gilbert Komechak
    £10.99

  • - Stories of a Texas Town
    by Margaret Mallott Smith
    £15.49

  • - The Great Dust Storm of April 14, 1935
    by Frank L Stallings
    £15.49

  • - In Memoriam, March 18, 1937, 3:17 P.M.
    by Lori Olson & Lori O'Neal
    £21.49

  • - The Great Wagon Roads That Opened the Southwest, 1823-1883
    by Roy L Swift, Leavitt & Jr Corning
    £17.99

  • - The History of Steer, Calf, And, Team Roping
    by Gail Hughbanks Woerner
    £18.49

  • by Bill O'Neal
    £15.49

  • - Oil Blood and Money Flowed Freely in the Boomtown of Borger
    by Jerry Sinise
    £15.49

  • - From the Oil Fields of Texas to Spindletop Farm of Kentucky
    by Greg Riley & Fred B McKinley
    £21.49

    Black Gold to Bluegrass is the first such work that concentrates wholly on the Second Spindletop Oil Boom and what happened afterward-taking the story from the oil fields of Southeast Texas and Louisiana to the Bluegrass of Kentucky.After partnering with Thomas Peter Lee of Houston, Frank Yount, water-well driller turned wildcatter, struck it rich, and the Yount-Lee Oil Company began a remarkable march that almost took it to the top of the oil industry. Although he used some of his wealth to benefit his fellowman, Frank Yount, also put together a priceless collection of antique violins, and some of the classiest and most expensive automobiles of the day, including three Duesenbergs and a Cord. He built a state-of-the-art Saddlebred training facility in Beaumont, hired dashing horseman Cape Grant to run it, and directed him to take the horses of Spindletop Stables to competitive shows throughout the county-and win!Frank Yount died young at age 53 in November 1933. Within two years, Pansy-his wife and principal heir-and the investors in the Yount-Lee Oil Company sold the enterprise to Houston attorney Wright Morrow for then what amounted to the third-largest financial transaction in American business history. Morrow, who later became one of the giants of Texas politics, immediately parceled off most of Yount-Lee's oil assets to Stanolind (Standard Oil of Indiana), a subsidiary of the giant Standard Oil conglomerate which later became Amoco. In spite of the magnitude of this transaction, when expressed in Depression era dollars, it was later widely acknowledged that no one, save perhaps Frank Yount himself, fully understood the astronomical significance and value of the Yount-Lee holdings.Pansy, no less independent and colorful than her husband (but somewhat more flamboyant) took her part of the family's fortune and moved Spindletop Stables to a 1,066 acre show farm in the horse country of Kentucky, building a 45,000 square foot mansion which she named Spindletop Hall, the centerpiece of the new and extremely successful Spindletop Farm. The farm became the most innovative saddle horse breeding facility of its time, and Pansy became a legend in horse circles.Using an array of previously unknown primary source materials from the Yount-Manion family archives, photographs never before published, and recently discovered film, McKinley and Riley present a book filled with incredible acts of generosity, long-standing controversies, intrigues, and twists and turns at every point.Black Gold to Bluegrass is a must for general readers and scholars alike, whose interests lie in Saddlebreds, antique automobiles, or violins; and for oil enthusiasts, the book paints a rags-to-riches story of a true wildcatter turned contemporary hero who embodies the American dream.

  • - Prisoners of War in Texas
    by Richard Paul Walker
    £19.99

  • - A Mystery and Adventure in the Big Thicket of Texas
    by Wanda A. Landrey
    £10.99

  • - Texan Korean and Vietnam Veterans of the Lower Rio Grande Valley
    by William L Adams
    £18.49

  • by Lonnie Graves
    £14.49

  • - Prince of Pirates
    by Jack C Ramsay, Jr Ramsay & Jack C
    £16.99

  • - From the Pages of the Alamo Journal
    by William R Chemerka
    £16.49

  • by Lonnie Graves
    £15.99

  • by William A Adams
    £15.99

  • - Life of a Texas Coastal County
    by William Allen & Sue H Taylor
    £19.99

  • - Memorable Savorings from the Waldemar Kitchen
    by Laura Pipkin Kramer
    £15.99 - 18.99

  • - Vice, Corruption, and Justice in Jefferson County, Texas
    by Wanda A Landrey & Laura C O'Toole
    £20.49

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