Second Generation
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Google books | books.google.com |
---|---|
Originally published | 1978 |
Authors | Howard Fast |
Preceded by | The Immigrants |
Followed by | The Establishment |
Genres | Historical Fiction |
Domestic Fiction | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 2619103 |
About Second Generation
She'll Risk Her Freedom to Find Freedom"A novel of satisfying depth and breadth, written in good, clean, forceful prose. " . . .
Californian winemakers are learning firefighting techniques
... Many would call the view breathtaking, but Alan Viader, a Second Generation winemaker at Viader Vineyard and Winery says what he sees now, is an overgrown forest...
Bumper midge hatch alert after warm spell
... She said if it remained damp or humid she would expect a " mega Second Generation" to start hatching...
Ghetto Kids: Winning Britain's Got Talent would mean a bigger house in Uganda
... " This is the Second Generation of Kavuma s Ghetto Kids to have found global stardom - the first generation was discovered dancing to Ugandan singer and went on to have millions of YouTube views...
In pictures: Windrush generations mark 75th anniversary
... And at the opening of Colin Brown s exhibition, Lovers Rock - a form of reggae created by the Second Generation, in the 1970s - Audrey Scott sang her hit, Goodbye my Love...
Thorpeness House in the Clouds marks its centenary
... Mr Ogilvie supplied the Second Generation Arts & Craft-style village designs, while architect Frederick Forbes-Glennie did the " practical nuts and bolts of building" said Dr de Mille...
The shops that connect people with their home countries
... Instead it is also the Second Generation, who might be buying food for their families, and increasingly online...
South Asian diaspora recall gnawing loneliness in post-war Britain
... Hearing Farah, I realised that there must be many thousands from the Second Generation, born in Britain, who grew up orphaned from their grandparents...
Japanese-American internment: " It can't be undone"
... She was Nisei, a Second Generation Japanese American who had been a teenager in the incarceration camps...
Thorpeness House in the Clouds marks its centenary
A landmark building created to disguise a coastal village's Water Tower is marking its centenary.
The House in The Clouds was opened in 1923 to provide Thorpeness, Suffolk, with storage for its water supply.
It was designed as " A Fantasy Water Tower in A Fantasy village" by its founder Glencairn Stuart Ogilvie.
Historian Charlotte de Mille said he would probably be " surprised and delighted" it is now one of The County 's most famous buildings.
The Building had seven bedrooms and two reception rooms in its tower, sitting beneath a 50,000 gallon (189,000 litre) water tank in the " house".
Mr Ogilvie initially called it The Gazebo , but when his friend and children's author Mrs Malcolm Mason, " he pounced on the name" said Dr de Mille.
While she was delighted with its design, A Journalist at the Sunday Referee described it as a " monstrous pigeoncote".
Mr Ogilvie replied it was " more practical and more picturesque than those usually erected by our municipal authorities" and.
The playwright had unexpectedly inherited The Estate in 1907 and " had a very theatrical vision for developing the land" said Dr de Mille.
" This Was A Fantasy village inspired by his friend, the Peter Pan playwright JM Barrie, " She Said .
At its centre was a lake called the Meare, with islands named after Peter Pan and Wendy.
Work on the Holiday Home business halted during World War One when his eldest son Alec died after being gassed.
Dr de Mille said he made employing former servicemen a priority and "85% of The Villagers and workforce came from an ex-service background" when work resumed in 1919.
The gravity-fed Water Tower was built with a steel structure, filled out with concrete breeze blocks made by his workforce in Thorpeness.
It was then clad in black weather boarding and a pantile roof, connecting it with traditional Suffolk architecture.
Mr Ogilvie supplied the Second Generation Arts & Craft-style village designs, while architect Frederick Forbes-Glennie did the " practical nuts and bolts of building" said Dr de Mille.
The House in The Cloud 's water tank was removed in 1979 after Thorpeness joined the mains water supply. The Cottage at The Top is now a large, galleried room.
The Building was chosen by the 20Th Century Society to represent 1924 in its book, 100 Buildings in 100 Years.
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com