Free Download Gary Meszaros, "Birds of the Lake Erie Region" English | 2001 | pages: 145 | ISBN: 0873386906 | PDF | 21,8 mb This latest collaboration of Carolyn V. Platt and Gary Meszaros is a beautifully photographed book that explores Lake Erie and its effects on the birds that make this region their home. Free Download The Battle of Lake Erie and Its Aftermath: A Reassessment (Audiobook) English | ASIN: B00LMLSMFQ | 2014 | 9 hours and 6 minutes | M4B@128 kbps | 496 MB Author: David Curtis Skaggs Narrator: Stephen W. Davis Experts weigh in on a pivotal engagement in the War of 1812. Few naval battles in American history have left a more enduring impression on America's national consciousness than the Battle of Lake Erie, September 10, 1813. Master Commandant Oliver Hazard Perry's battle flag emblazoned with the message "Don t Give Up the Ship", now enshrined at the U.S. Naval Academy, has become a naval maxim. His succinct after-action report, "We have met the enemy and they are ours", constitutes one of the more memorable battle summaries in American history. This splendid collection celebrates the bicentennial of the American victory with a review of the battle and its consequences. The volume is divided into three sections. John D. Cimperman, Early Settlers Association of the Western Reserve, "Erie Street Cemetery" English | 2011 | ISBN: 0738583421, 1531655513 | EPUB | pages: 128 | 46.0 mb Ralph K. Andrist, "The Erie Canal" English | 2018 | ISBN: 1640192506 | EPUB | pages: 142 | 2.6 mb The Erie Canal was a preposterous idea. Even President Thomas Jefferson, usually ahead of his time, believed that it could not be built for at least a century, and yet, the Erie Canal came to be just as its planners had thought it would. For the first time in the history of the United States, a cheap, fast route ran through the Appalachians, the mountains that had so effectively divided the West from the East of early America. With the canal, the country's fertile interior became accessible and its great inland lakes were linked to all the seas of the world. Here, from award-winning historian Ralph K. Andrist, is the canal's dramatic and little-told story. |