Results for Gathering
Gathering Place
The Gathering Place
This natural ...
A Gathering Place
]Panel 1:]
Between 1100 and 1200, more people...
Gathering
On June 15, 1897 John and Maggie Simpson donated land on w...
The Gathering Storm
Atop this knoll Confederate General D. H. Hill had an unob...
A Gathering Storm
North
By the end of July 1777, the British invasion ...
Kingstree: Gathering Vital Intelligence
By late August 1780, Francis Marion and the Whig militiame...
Results for Gathering
Gathering Place
The Gathering Place
This natural prairie was a gathering place for the Pend d’Oreille people digging camas, the Swan Valley’s first homesteader Ben Holland who in the late 1800s-early 1900s brought hunters together for pack trips, mapmakers and surveyors gathering ...
A Gathering Place
]Panel 1:]
Between 1100 and 1200, more people lived in this area than ever before, or since. Located along routes linking large populations to the northeast and south, villages here were well situated for trade. As people, goods, and ideas converged ...
Gathering
On June 15, 1897 John and Maggie Simpson donated land on which to build a Gathering place for residents of the valley.This structure became known as the Clubhouse and originally housed the gun club. The Clubhouse also became a community ...
The Gathering Storm
Atop this knoll Confederate General D. H. Hill had an unobstructed view to the crest of Malvern Hill. In the distance stood the West farm house and fields where Union batteries waited to dispute any Southern advance. By early afternoon ...
A Gathering Storm
North
By the end of July 1777, the British invasion from Canada under General John Burgoyne had progressed to Fort Edward on the Hudson River. Desperately in need of supplies, Burgoyne dispatched an expedition on August 11 under Lieutenant Colonel Friedrich ...
Kingstree: Gathering Vital Intelligence
By late August 1780, Francis Marion and the Whig militiamen of eastern South Carolina had already begun to cause alarm among the British military leaders in charge of subduing the province. Sensing the British would move against him, Col. Marion ...