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In 'Lark Rise to Candleford,' Harold John Massingham weaves a tapestry of rural English life as it stood on the cusp of modernity. Known for its evocative depiction of the countryside, the work is a semi-autobiographical trilogy that intricately captures the rhythms and rituals of 19th-century Oxfordshire. Massingham's prose, rich in detail and steeped in nostalgia, portrays May Day festivities, the forgotten pastimes of bygone days, and the everyday lives of farmworkers and craftsmen. His narrative, often hailed for its lyrical quality and keen observation, embeds the reader firmly in an era where tradition collides with progress, preserving a world both idyllic and robust in the face of ch...
This book presents a series of cases of psychosocial interventions with schizophrenia and other serious mental health difficulties. Co-authored by a range of professionals in different roles, as well as carers and service users. Captures the benefits of a true alliance between the service user and their clinical worker. Details the skills and knowledge needed for interventions in a range of settings, including outreach work and family work, treatment on acute wards, as well as organisational change. Introductions and conclusions to each case examine the implications for practice and policy.
Lodowick and Maria Eva Zirkle came from Germany in 1725 and located in Pennsylvania. Mr. Zirkle died in 1746 and is buried in a cemetery in Philadelphia. In 1755, Maria Eva Zirkle, two daughters and five sons moved to Virginia to a place called "The Forest" now Forestville, Shendoah County, Virginia.
Book is divided into two parts. The first volume contains a list of families Edward, John, Thomas, Samuel, Desire and Isaac Doty, and the second volume begins with the family of Joseph Doty
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