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Informationen zum Autor Irena McCammon Scott is the great-great-grandniece of John Purdue. She lives in Delaware County, Ohio, on a farm John Purdue is believed to have purchased in 1865 for his sister, Catherine Purdue McCammon. She has a Ph.D. in physiology from the University of Missouri, was an Assistant Professor of Biology at St. Bonaventure University, and has done research and teaching at Cornell University, the Ohio State Klappentext In the most comprehensive biographical study of John Purdue (c. 1802-1876) to date, Purdue's great-great-grandniece describes her travels to the diverse places where Purdue had lived in order to learn about the mysterious relative known in her family as Uncle. Using fresh, unpublished source materials-including Purdue's personal correspondence, business ledgers, and the family oral histories-the author examines Purdue's beginning among illiterate, immigrant, Pennsylvania mountain-hollow folks. Uncle challenges a commonly held belief that Purdue was a cold-hearted business mogul. Instead the author shows Purdue as a human being and as a generous family man with a visionary nature. Zusammenfassung Describes Purdue's travels to diverse places where she lived in order to learn about the mysterious relative known in her family as Uncle. This book examines her beginning among illiterate! immigrant! Pennsylvania mountain-hollow folks. It describes the destitute family's journey into Ohio and her ascent from local entrepreneur to national figure. Inhaltsverzeichnis AcknowledgmentsForewordPrologueChapter One: Pennsylvania: The "Great Path" to Exploration and EducationChapter Two: Ohio Legends and Facts: Whisler and Marion, Ohio, and MichiganChapter Three: AdelphiChapter Four: 1839–1850: Lafayette, IndianaChapter Five: The 1860s: Civic Leader, CEO, Manager, ConnoisseurChapter Six: 1860: The Walnut Grove FarmChapter Seven: 1864–1870: Uncle's First GiftsChapter Eight: 1866–1870: "The Scales Fell From Our Eyes"Chapter Nine: 1870–1876: Industry, Mines, and Gutsy, High-Rolling KingsChapter Ten: 1870–1876: Field of DreamsChapter Eleven: LegacyNotesReferencesIndex...