Add this copy of Slow Settles the Dust in Oregon: a Memoir [Signed] to cart. $48.65, very good condition, Sold by Silicon Valley Fine Books rated 5.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Sunnyvale, CA, UNITED STATES, published 1993 by Four Mountains Productions.
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Seller's Description:
Very Good. 131 pages. Warmly INSCRIBED by the author on the front flypage and SIGNED by the author inside of the front cover, where it notes this is copy number 114 of the first edition released to the general public (enlarged & revised). Very good, a little soiling on covers, blindstamp of recipient of inscription, who has also noted the date of death of the author, else a nice, clean copy. Additional photo(s) available upon request. Prompt, professional shipping, with free tracking on U.S. orders!
Add this copy of Slow Settles the Dust in Oregon: a Memoir to cart. $47.00, good condition, Sold by Eastburn Books rated 4.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Albany, OR, UNITED STATES, published 1993 by FOUR MOUNTAIN PRODUCTIONS.
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Seller's Description:
Good + Book. Signed by Author(s) Good+ pictorial softcover. 1993. SIGNED/LIMITED/NUMBERED edition. This being #117 and SIGNED by AUTHOR underneath with no inscription. Photos throughout. Light scuffs. SOME SOILING TO COVERS. Pages clean. Binding solid. 131 pp. "The range of characters and scenes includes shanghaied ancestors, the oregon trail, Indians, murderers, stagecoach wrecks and more..."
Add this copy of Slow Settles the Dust in Oregon to cart. $47.00, very good condition, Sold by Boyd Used & Rare Books rated 3.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Portland, OR, UNITED STATES, published 1993 by Four Mountains Productions.
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Seller's Description:
Very Good+ Size: 10x8x0; First edition (1991), limited to fifty copies. Signed and inscribed by the author. Some toning along spine on front cover, else clean and unmarked. Includes about 120 historic photos, mostly from the author's collection. iv, 126, [1] pages. 10.75 x 8.25 inches. History of the Perkins, Gray, and Howard pioneer families in Oregon, who settled in the town of Yamhill, in Yamhill County, and at Oak Grove (near Milwaukie) in Clackamas County. A nicely produced account of the lives, activities, and accomplishments of the descendants of Eli Perkins (pioneer of 1844), William Henry Gray (who came west in 1836 with Marcus Whitman), and Gen. Oliver Otis Howard. There is a great amount of detail, many historic photographs, and many stories of these significant Oregon families through the late 19th and early 20th century, which provide a unique and personal glimpse into life as it was in the Portland, Milwaukie, and Yamhill vicinities. Eli Perkins (b. 1786) left New York and came to Oregon in 1844 with three generations and 20 members of his family, traveling overland on the Oregon Trail. They stopped at the Whitman mission for a while (interestingly, Sarah Perkins helped nurse the youngest of the seven Sager orphans) before heading on to Yamhill County. Joel Perkins founded the town of Lafayette and Norris Perkins was one of the signers of the Articles of Incorporation for the city of North Yamhill. William Henry Gray (1811-1889) came out west in 1836 with Marcus Whitman and played a prominent role in the establishment of Oregon's provisional governement. His fourth son, James Taylor Gray, was a notable steamboat captain and the husband of Grace Ellen Howard. General Oliver Otis Howard's eldest daughter, Grace Ellen Howard established the estate of Grayhaven with her husband James on the Willamette River near Oak Grove in Clackamas County. (The general had played a prominent role for the Union Army during the Civil War and later was the head of the Army's Department of the Columbia, which was headquartered at Fort Vancouver. Also, notably, he had been selected by President Lincoln to serve as the first Commissioner of the Freedmen's Bureau. Howard University is named for him. ) The author of this history is Norris H. Perkins (1912-2008), the son of Cloan Perkins and grandson of Norris H. Perkins, Sr.