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Rush
Paperback

Rush

$59.99
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Rush is a classic example of rural small-town America. The East Rush hamlet, now known as simply Rush, was first named Webster’s Mills. Although not the first settler in the area, John Webster, who purchased the land in 1810, soon began building a town–first a sawmill and a gristmill, followed by a general store, a hotel, and a school. Other businesses followed, and more families arrived. East Rush was the primary hamlet and, along with West Rush and North Rush, comprised a hardworking, close-knit, rural farming community. By the late 1800s, it was a thriving and self-sufficient community. And, like any town, it is the individuals who built it and lived here that bring Rush’s past to life. Years later, the strong family and agricultural base continues, but the bustling activity that centered around the trains and mills has quieted.

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Arcadia Publishing
Country
United States
Date
21 July 2014
Pages
127
ISBN
9781467122085

Rush is a classic example of rural small-town America. The East Rush hamlet, now known as simply Rush, was first named Webster’s Mills. Although not the first settler in the area, John Webster, who purchased the land in 1810, soon began building a town–first a sawmill and a gristmill, followed by a general store, a hotel, and a school. Other businesses followed, and more families arrived. East Rush was the primary hamlet and, along with West Rush and North Rush, comprised a hardworking, close-knit, rural farming community. By the late 1800s, it was a thriving and self-sufficient community. And, like any town, it is the individuals who built it and lived here that bring Rush’s past to life. Years later, the strong family and agricultural base continues, but the bustling activity that centered around the trains and mills has quieted.

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Arcadia Publishing
Country
United States
Date
21 July 2014
Pages
127
ISBN
9781467122085