18,99 €
inkl. MwSt.
Versandkostenfrei*
Versandfertig in über 4 Wochen
payback
9 °P sammeln
  • Broschiertes Buch

Stories from the beheading of an Englishman to the buried ships of Robinson Landing. The streets of Alexandria have born witness to singular individuals and stirring events in their long history. In 1623, just across the Potomac River, an English adventurer walked into an Indian village and literally lost his head. In 1654, a notorious woman became the first European to own land in what would become Alexandria. A hundred years later, George Washington and General Braddock marched from Alexandria to a massacre and in 1814 the British looted the city. Read the true history of Robinson Landing,…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Stories from the beheading of an Englishman to the buried ships of Robinson Landing. The streets of Alexandria have born witness to singular individuals and stirring events in their long history. In 1623, just across the Potomac River, an English adventurer walked into an Indian village and literally lost his head. In 1654, a notorious woman became the first European to own land in what would become Alexandria. A hundred years later, George Washington and General Braddock marched from Alexandria to a massacre and in 1814 the British looted the city. Read the true history of Robinson Landing, the seedy story of Del Ray and the tale of Major George Patton and the 1930s cavalry at Fort Myer. /Author Ted Pulliam follows his popular Historic Alexandria with a deeper look into the fascinating past of the city on the Potomac.
Autorenporträt
Ted Pulliam's articles, some of which are included in this book, have appeared in Legal Times, WWII History magazine, American History magazine, the Washington Post and other publications. He is author of Historic Alexandria: An Illustrated History, published by the City of Alexandria. A current member of the Alexandria Archaeological Commission and the Alexandria African Heritage Trail Committee, he also is a past member of the Board of the Alexandria Historical Society and the Alexandria Waterfront Commission. He received the award given annually by the historical society for making "especially noteworthy contributions to the preservation of the historic, cultural and artistic heritage of Alexandria." He is a graduate of Davidson College and Columbia University Law School and lives in the Del Ray part of Alexandria.