Quotes About History
But it seemed like the more we advanced, the more the future looked impossible, making us return to the more radical times in the past.
~ Christian Lacroix
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Before judging a person you have to know the story of his life.
~ Christian Orlandi
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Southern towns had simply not welcomed the iron road with the same warm embrace as their northern counterparts.
~ Christian Wolmar
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I love doing normal things - movies, shopping, going out with friends, writing, reading, taking hot bubble baths - that's a big one for relaxation. I also love to go to art and history museums.
~ Christina Aguilera
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Something inexorable seeds itself in the place of your origin. You can never escape the bonds of family history, no matter how far you travel.
~ Christina Baker Kline
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If you really want to know me, I said, we'll have to start with the witches.
~ Christina Baker Kline
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Over the years, certain stories in the history of a family take hold. They're passed from generation to generation, gaining substance and meaning along the way. You have to learn to sift through them, separating fact from conjecture, the likely from the implausible. Here is what I know: Sometimes the least believable stories are the true ones.
~ Christina Baker Kline
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You can never escape the bonds of family history, no matter how far you travel. And the skeleton of a house can carry in its bones the marrow of all that came before.
~ Christina Baker Kline
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Christina Baker Kline
~ The 'c' sounds like
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It reminds me of The House of the Seven Gables.
~ Christina Baker Kline
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Something inexorable seeds itself in the place of your origin. You can never escape the bonds of family history, no matter how far you travel. And the skeleton of a house can carry in its bones the marrow of all that came before. Who are you, Christina Olson? he asked me once. Nobody had ever asked me that. I had to think about it for a while. If
~ Christina Baker Kline
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Over the years, certain stories in the history of family take hold. They're passes from generation to generation, gaining substance and meaning along the way. You have to learn to sift through them, separating fact from conjecture, the likely form the implausible. Here is what I know: Sometimes the least believable stories are the true ones.
~ Christina Baker Kline
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ORPHAN TRAIN is a specifically American story of mobility and rootlessness, highlighting a little-known but historically significant moment in our country's past. Between 1854 and 1929, so-called orphan trains transported more than two hundred thousand orphaned, abandoned, and homeless children—many
~ Christina Baker Kline
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about Minnesota he tells me all about it—how it became a state just over seventy years ago and is now the twelfth largest in the United States. How its name comes from a Dakota Indian word for "cloudy water." How it contains thousands of lakes, filled with fish of all kinds—walleye, for one thing, catfish, largemouth bass, rainbow trout, perch, and pike. The Mississippi River starts in Minnesota, did I know that?
~ Christina Baker Kline
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and the National Orphan Train Complex in Concordia, Kansas,
~ Christina Baker Kline
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Orphan Train Rider: One Boy's True Story by Andrea Warren; Children of the Orphan Trains, 1854–1929 by Holly Littlefield; and Rachel Calof's Story: Jewish Homesteader on the Northern Plains edited by J. Sanford Rikoon (which
~ Christina Baker Kline
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We took away their country and their means of support. It was for this and against this that they made war. Could anyone expect less?
~ Christina Baker Kline
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There was never a cataclysmic moment in which things might have been, however briefly, etched in relief against memory, against things to come—a moment which, by its sheer magnitude, defined her history and her future. Instead, Kathryn thinks, she has disintegrated slowly over a number of years.
~ Christina Baker Kline
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Riddled his body with bullets"—my da talked like that. Mam was always shushing him, but he waved her off. "It's important they know this," he said. "It's their history! We might be over here now, but by God, our people are over there.
~ Christina Baker Kline
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there were over thirty thousand Wabanakis living on the East Coast in 1600 and that 90 percent of them had died by 1620, almost entirely a result of contact with settlers, who brought foreign diseases and alcohol, drained resources, and fought with the tribes for control of the land.
~ Christina Baker Kline
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that 90 percent of them had died by 1620, almost entirely a result of contact with settlers, who brought foreign diseases and
~ Christina Baker Kline
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And though they were called savages, even a prominent English general, Philip Sheridan, had to admit, "We took away their country and their means of support. It was for this and against this that they made war. Could anyone expect less?
~ Christina Baker Kline
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In Mr. Reed's classroom there's a photo of Molly Molasses taken near the end of her life. In it she sits ramrod straight, wearing a beaded, peaked headdress and two large silver brooches around her neck. Her face is dark and wrinkled and her expression is fierce. Sitting in the empty classroom after school one day, Molly stares at that face for a long time, looking for answers to questions she doesn't know how to ask.
~ Christina Baker Kline
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that there were over thirty thousand Wabanakis living on the East Coast in 1600 and that 90 percent of them had died by 1620, almost entirely a result of contact with settlers, who brought foreign diseases and alcohol, drained resources, and fought with the tribes for control of the land.
~ Christina Baker Kline
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