Filter
- format:Paperback
- imprint:The History Press
- bisac: TRAVEL / United States / South / West South Central (AR, LA, OK, TX)
- series:American Chronicles
- History > Native American
- History > United States > State & Local > Southwest (AZ, NM, OK, TX)
- Photography > Subjects & Themes > Regional (see also TRAVEL > Pictorials)
- Travel > Pictorials (see also PHOTOGRAPHY > Subjects & Themes > Regional)
- Travel > United States > South > West South Central (AR, LA, OK, TX)
- format:Paperback
- imprint:The History Press
- bisac: TRAVEL / United States / South / West South Central (AR, LA, OK, TX)
- series:American Chronicles
- History > Native American
- History > United States > State & Local > Southwest (AZ, NM, OK, TX)
- Photography > Subjects & Themes > Regional (see also TRAVEL > Pictorials)
- Travel > Pictorials (see also PHOTOGRAPHY > Subjects & Themes > Regional)
- Travel > United States > South > West South Central (AR, LA, OK, TX)
2 products
Historic Tales from the Texas Republic
9781609499389
Regular price $23.99 Save Liquid error (snippets/product-template line 248): Computation results in '-Infinity'%
Though the Republic of Texas existed as a sovereign nation for just nine years, the legacy lives on in the names that distinguish the landscape of the Lone Star State. Austin, Houston, Travis, Lamar, Seguin, Burnet, Bowie, Zavala, Crockett--these historical giants, often at odds, fought through their differences to achieve freedom from Mexico and Santa Anna, establishing a republic fit to be the twenty-eighth state to join the Union. In nineteen historical tales, Jeffery Robenalt chronicles the fight to define and defend the Republic of Texas, from revolutionary beginnings to annexation.

Hidden History of the Llano Estacado
9781625858863
Regular price $24.99 Save Liquid error (snippets/product-template line 248): Computation results in '-Infinity'%
The Llano Estacado, or "Staked Plain," of Texas and eastern New Mexico spreads two hundred miles across what early visitors called "an ocean of land." No other place on Earth is quite like it. Humans first inhabited the area more than twelve thousand years ago. Subsequently, settlers came to convert the grassland to ranches and then to sprawling farms. Every new generation performed its duty at this cultural crossroads, from the trade routes established by the comancheros to the fateful meeting between Buddy Holly and Elvis Presley at Lubbock's Cotton Club. Noted West Texas historians Paul H. Carlson and David J. Murrah compiled and edited fifty-six brief stories presenting the Llano Estacado's heritage at its liveliest and most unfamiliar.
