![]() ![]() This book gives voice to some of those who would otherwise be relegated to the forgotten.ĭon't forget to check out the Appendix for a list of those 800 women's names, their emigration date, age at emigration and the source for their story from the Kansas State Historical Society's Lilla Day Monroe Collection. Stratton was born and raised in Washington, DC, but considers Kansas and her family there as her second home. of autobiographical accounts written by hundreds of Kansas pioneer women in the early twentieth century, Joanna Stratton has created a collection hailed. That's genealogy, resurrecting the past of those who are unknown and forgotten. But historian perforce concentrate on the happy few who leave records, give speeches, write books, make fortunes, hold offices, win or lose battles and thrones.Modern social historians devise brand new techniques, quantitative and other, to achieve what Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie has called "the silent, mathematical resurrection of a total past."" writes, "History is lived in the main by the unknown and forgotten. In his Introduction to this book, Arthur M. ![]() ![]() Here are stories of what it was like to be a pioneer including "prairie fires, locust plagues.the drama, danger and excitement of the pioneer experience." StrattonĪutobiographical accounts of eight hundred women. ![]() Voices from the Kansas Frontier by Joanna L. ![]()
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