—By Tiffany Amber Stockton
Thursday, July 9, 2026
Independence and the Island Spirit
Wednesday, July 8, 2026
Anna Essinger: Understanding the Times in Nazi Germany
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| Image from Deposit Photos, @everett225 |
But the time and place of her birth gave her the opportunity to make history.
Anna was born to a secular Jewish family in Germany in 1879. At the age of 20, she traveled to the United States, where she lived with her aunt in Nashville, Tennessee. During her years in America, she came under the influence of the Quakers, whose educational philosophy would shape the rest of her life. She later earned a master’s degree from the University of Wisconsin.
Anna returned to Germany in 1919. Around 1925, she founded a boarding school, which originally grew out of the children’s home that her sister established in 1912. The school was fundamentally different from most schools in Germany at the time. Discipline was less rigid, and students learned basic life skills, as well as academics.
Anna read Hitler’s Mein Kampf before he came to power and she found it deeply concerning. While her school was non-denominational, she did have many Jewish students. When Hitler came to power in early 1933, she remembered what she read. She watched to see what would happen.
In the spring of 1933, public buildings, including schools, were required to fly the swastika alongside Germany's traditional flag. Anna chose to comply with the order, but she also arranged an extended field trip for all of her students, so that the flag flew over an empty school.
Perhaps it was this event that drew more official attention to her school, or perhaps it was simply the fact that she was Jewish. However, oversight became more strict. And then, in May of 1933, Anna learned that her students would not be allowed to sit for the exam that gave them the opportunity to attend university. At this point, she knew that her students had no educational future in Germany. I doubt she foresaw the extent of what would happen, but she saw enough.
When it became clear that the students from Anna’s school would not be allowed higher education, many of the non-Jewish parents withdrew their children. Some families may have withdrawn due to increasing pressure on Germans to distance themselves from Jewish-owned businesses and institutions.
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| Image from Deposit Photos, @Quasarphotos |
She was also spending time talking to the parents of the children in her school. It surprises me how many of the parents agreed to let her take their children out of the country, considering how early this was in the Nazi rule. Not all agreed, but the majority did. Over 60 of her students, mostly Jewish, would be leaving.
The 13 oldest, who had been refused the opportunity to enter university left first in the summer of 1933. Given only a few weeks to prepare for the equivalent exam in England, nine of the 13 passed.
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| Image from Deposit Photos, @Mnapoli |
In Bunce Court, their lives would change. The financial support Anna had received for the school in Germany was no longer available. The students learned to grow vegetables and tend to chickens as well as typical academics. English officials were suspicious of the school, thinking that no substantial education could happen with such limited resources. But within two years, they were convinced that the Bunce Court school was doing everything it needed to do.
Anna left Germany two years before the Nuremberg Laws (which greatly restricted what Jewish people could do) were instituted. She left five years before Kristallnacht. She recognized the direction Germany was heading long before most of her fellow Germans.
If you'd like to hear what life at Bunce Court was really like, I share the memories of two former students here.
When I read Anna’s story, there is one Bible verse that comes to mind. First Chronicles 12:32 reads in part, “From Issachar, men who understood the times and understood what Israel should do.” I can’t think of any description that fits Anna better.
P. S. While preparing this story, I became interested in the bit about Anna taking the children on a field trip while the swastika flew over their school. I have not been able to make the timeline make sense. Some resources date the order to fly the flag as early as March 1933 and indicate that it remained flying after that. Most stories of Anna make a point of her leaving the flag up for one day while the school was empty. For now, it is one of history’s little mysteries.
Martha’s debut novel, A Steadfast Heart, is now available. You can learn more about her books and historical research at marthahutchens.com.
Heiress Kaitlyn Montgomery runs straight from the scandal chasing her toward a fresh start on a secluded ranch. She strikes a bargain with Drew—a marriage convenient for both of them.
But the more Kaitlyn adapts to ranch life and forms a bond with Drew’s children and their enigmatic father, she realizes that this ranch is where she is meant to be. And then her past catches up with her…
Tuesday, July 7, 2026
From Knotted Lace to Tatting
by Izzy James
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| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tatting#/media/File:2021-03-21_DSG0835_butterfly-shaped_handiwork_in_tatting_technique_(high_resolution).jpg |
From what I can gather, tatting, like most textiles, has no definite beginnings. It appears to have evolved from the techniques of knotted lace. Although one could argue that anyone who did cut work, embroidery, and even darning could have made the leap to creating fabric from knotted thread. Knotted lace and tatting are different from knitting and crochet in that those techniques create fabric by looping yarn. Knotted lace and tatting create a lace fabric by joining rings out of knots and chains. Like knitting and crochet, tatting is still in wide practice today. YouTube has tons of videos should you like to give it a try.
Knotted lace is worked by winding thread onto a shuttle, then a series of knots are formed in a line like a string of beads. Knotting was very popular in the eighteenth century becoming a favorite in the English court. Both Queen Mary, and Queen Charlotte were said to be avid knotters. Below is an image of Anne, 2nd Countess of Albemarle, and her shuttle and thread.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anne_van_Keppel,_Countess_of_Albemarle#/media/File:Anne,_2nd_Countess_of_Albemarle_by_Sir_Joshua_Reynolds.jpg
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Knotting was portable, and doable with a very small number of tools. All that’s needed is a shuttle, thread, scissors, and a needle to sew sections together and to attach the lace to whatever it was intended for.
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| https://tattingcollector.weebly.com/tatting-shuttles.html |
Tatting shuttles are a good two inches smaller than knotting shuttles and they are closed at the end to allow better control of the thread. Good quality threads are easy to find and they come in many colors and useful sizes. A tiny hook is also easy to find and makes joining easier.
In my book, The Road Home, Beti’s friend Agatha is a dressmaker. One of her favorite things is tatting lace for her creations. I am currently working on Agatha’s story. It will be out later this year.
A Cinderella story about a pirate's daughter on the Wilderness Road to Kentucky.
Beti Boatman, pirate's daughter, long dreamed of traveling to a place where no one knew her name. When looters showed up on the day she buried her father her choice was made. Leave her home or allow the only two people in the world she loves to live in constant danger.
When Zeke and what's left of his regiment organized a wagon train west, they did not expect to encounter a woman traveling alone. Beti insists she doesn't need his help, but Zeke knows better and the strong need to protect her runs deep. Things get complicated when looters track Beti down. And emissaries from her mother’s country claim Beti is a real princess. Now Beti must choose: the hardships in Kentucky or a throne.
Izzy James lives in the traces of history in coastal Virginia with her fabulous husband in a house brimming with books. Born with a traveling bone and an itch to knit. Izzy travels to every location where her books take place, from Williamsburg to Wyoming, popping in yarn stores along the way.
Connect with Izzy through her website at izzyjamesauthor.com and sign up for her monthly newsletter.
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Website: https://izzyjamesauthor.com
Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.com/stores/Izzy-James/author/B08DRW4JY3
BookBub: https://www.bookbub.com/authors/izzy-james
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/9815799.Izzy_James
References:
https://www.ringoftatters.org.uk/19ctatting.html
The Complete Book of Tatting: Everything You Wanted to Know but Couldn’t Find Out About Shuttle Lace by Rebecca Jones, Lacis Publications, USA
https://daffodilandleek.com/a-brief-history-of-tatting
https://www.britannica.com/art/tatting
Monday, July 6, 2026
Women of Resistance Andree de Jongh
Born under the German occupation of Belgium during World War I, perhaps it is not surprising that two decades later, Andrée de Jongh would create the Comet Line and personally lead downed airmen to safety when her beloved country was once again occupied by German troops. She may have been further inspired by stories of Edith Cavell, a Red Cross nurse who’d been executed the year before Andrée was born for helping soldiers flee the Netherlands.
In 1940, Andrée began working as a volunteer nurse with the Red Cross in Brussels where she cared for captured Allied servicemen. She eventually decided to help them escape and arranged for a series of “safe houses” in which the men could wait until being escorted out of the country. She also provided civilian clothing and false identification papers. Much of the success of the Comet Line, as it became known, was the result of using unconventional hiding places such as farms, convents, and private homes. Ultimately the largest of several escape lines in occupied Europe, the Comet Line was comprised of sixty-five to seventy-five percent women.
The first group to escape had eleven men who traveled on foot through France and into Spain wherethey were immediately arrested. Only two of the escapees made it to England. Unhappy with the results, Andrée, with the code name Dédée, decided to lead the next group herself. The mission was a success with the entire group arriving at the British consulate in Bilbao where they were given safe harbor. She requested financial help, but the British were hesitant to back a young woman in charge of a brand-new line. After a period of time during which Andrée and others led several successful missions, the British offered logistical and financial support, however, she was not interested in outside control, so she only accepted money.
Before her arrest in January 1943, Andrée personally led two dozen round trips escorting almost 120 airmen to safety. She would take them by train to Bayonne or cities close to the Spanish border, then hike with them across the Pyrenees Mountains into Spain. Her arrest followed that of a large number of Comet Line workers, one of whom was her father. She later indicated that she was probably betrayed by a farm worker at one of the safe houses.
After her arrest, she was interrogated nineteen times by the Abwehr and twice by the Gestapo, but by all reports told them very little other than to say she was in charge of the Comet Line. Skeptical that such a petite young woman could possibly be telling the truth, authorities sent her to Ravensbrük.
Andrée survived the war and was liberated in April 1945 when the Red Army arrived. Thin and undernourished, she would suffer health problems for the rest of her life, however that didn’t keep her from serving others less fortunate. She attained her nursing degree then worked in African leprosariums (communities for those afflicted with leprosy) during her entire career.
Recognized for her brave work, she received the United States Medal of Freedom with golden palms,
the British George Medal, the Belgian Croix de Guerre with palm, became a Chevalier of the French Légion d’honneur and a Chevalier of the Belgian Order of Leopold, and was granted the honorary rank of lieutenant colonel in the Belgian Army. In 1985, King Baudouin of Belgium made her a countess in the Belgian nobility. She passed away in Brussels in 2007 at the age of 91.
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Linda Shenton Matchett writes happily-ever-after historical Christian fiction about second chancesand women who overcome life’s challenges to be better versions of themselves. A native of Baltimore, Maryland, she was born a stone’s throw from Fort McHenry (of Star-Spangled Banner fame) and has lived in historical places all her life. She is a volunteer docent and archivist at the Wright Museum of WWII. She now lives in central New Hampshire where she explores the history of this great state, immerses herself in the imaginary worlds created by other authors, and drinks copious amounts of tea.
Dutch Dawn
Will they survive the 500-mile journey to freedom?
Isak Westgard is only six missions short to be rotated stateside. Then the unthinkable happens, and he crashes in the occupied Netherlands where the chances of him making it back to England are slim to none. The beautiful and tough-as-nails resistance courier begs to differ and claims she hasn’t lost anyone yet. The problem is the longer they’re together, the less he wants to escape.
Annaliese Claasen has escorted her fair share of refugees and downed Allied pilots to safety - too numerous to remember. Until now. There’s something different about the Norwegian-American lieutenant, and it’s more than his good looks. Can she get him out of the country before losing her heart?
Purchase Link: https://books2read.com/u/bMjoxV
Photo Credits:
Andree in 1941 By Unknown author - Public Domain
Andree behind desk: The Boston Globe
Sources:
https://www.lowellmilkencenter.org/programs/projects/view/andree-de-jongh-faster-than-a-comet/hero
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DwEVhyDzpfQ
https://www.discoveringbelgium.com/andree-de-jongh/
https://www.liberationroute.com/en/stories/474/andree-de-jongh
https://www.andreecollective.org/who-is-andre
Sunday, July 5, 2026
Marthe Cohn - An Unlikely WWII Allied Spy
By Mary Dodge Allen
Who would have believed it? She was a French-born Jewish refugee, age 25, under five feet in height - and yet she worked as a spy behind German lines.
But Marthe had courage, a quick mind, and she spoke fluent German and French. She also had a fierce determination to do anything she could to help the Allies defeat the Nazis.
Marthe was born in Metz, France on April 13, 1920 to Regine and Fischel Hoffnung. They were an Orthodox Jewish family, and her grandfather was a prominent rabbi. Marthe had six siblings, but she was the only one who resembled their mother - fair skin, blonde hair and blue eyes.
Metz, France is located in the area of Alsace-Lorraine, only a few miles from the German border. Germany annexed this area in 1870 and held it nearly fifty years, until it was returned to France after WWI. While under German control, the residents of Alsace-Lorraine were only allowed to speak German.
By the time Marthe was born, Alsace-Lorraine was once again part of France, and French could be freely spoken, as well as German. As a result, she grew up bilingual, speaking German to her parents and French with friends and in school.
Kristallnacht - The Night of Broken Glass:
During November 9-10, 1938, the Nazi government staged a barrage of violence against German and Austrian Jews, arresting and beating them, while destroying their property.
In one German city, a Jewish teenager was brutally thrown out of a three-story window. He broke both legs as he landed on the broken and burning household furniture belonging to his family and others.
Marthe's family and others in their Jewish community resolved to help the Jewish families who were fleeing Germany by crossing into France. They provided shelter, food and money so they could travel on to reach relatives in safer areas.
WWII Begins:
France declared war on Nazi Germany in September 1939, after the invasion of Poland. Marthe's oldest brother Fred enlisted in the French Army and was sent to the Maginot Line. Metz city officials advised Jewish families to move further into France, away from the German border.
Marthe's large family packed as much as they could in suitcases and left behind their home and business to resettle in the town of Poitiers, southwest of Paris, where Marthe's Uncle Benoit lived.
The Nazis Occupy France:
During May - June 1940, the German military conducted a 'Blitzkreig' (lightning war), conquering France and its neighboring countries. The Maginot Line fell quickly. Marthe's brother Fred was taken prisoner, but he escaped and briefly rejoined the family in Poitiers. Then he left to join the Resistance movement.
In the summer of 1940, Marthe, age 20, got a job to help support her family. She was hired to work as a French/German interpreter at Poitiers town hall. Her blonde hair, blue eyes and German surname 'Hoffnung' convinced Nazi officials she was 'Aryan.' Working as a Jew under the supervision of the enemy wasn't easy, but she learned to handle the pressure.
Beginning in the autumn of 1940, the Nazis ordered Jewish residents to receive new identity papers with JUIV or JUIVE in bold red letters. More edicts followed, banning Jews from many occupations, taking over businesses, enacting strict curfews, and confiscating radios, telephones and typewriters.
In April 1941, Marthe hosted a small party to celebrate her twenty-first birthday. Of all her siblings, Marthe was closest to her sister Stephanie, who was studying to become a doctor. Stephanie came to the party with some of her fellow medical students. One of them, Jacques Delaunay, soon became engaged to Marthe.
Persecution Intensifies:
In August 1941, Nazi officials discovered Marthe was Jewish, and she was fired from her job at the town hall. Three months later, she began nursing training at a Red Cross nursing college. It was run by a kind French woman, who defied Nazi rules by allowing Marthe to enroll, knowing she was Jewish. The woman declared, "There's no prejudice here."
Weeks later, Marthe was approached in the street by a French clerk she had worked with at the town hall. He offered to make forged identity papers for her and her family (without the red JUIV stamp). The clerk refused payment, even though he risked being arrested and killed if Nazi officials caught him.
Marthe was overwhelmed at his kindness and asked why he would take this risk. He said:
"If I can help one family escape from the Germans, then I will. I can't just stand by and watch what is happening."
She hid these forged papers in a safe place, waiting for the right time for her family to escape from Nazi-occupied France to the relative freedom of the '"unoccupied zone" (the area of southern France controlled by the puppet 'Vichy' government.)
The Noose Tightens:
During 1942, the Nazis began requiring Jews to wear a garish yellow cloth star on their clothing, and the random arrest and imprisonment of Jews became more commonplace. Marthe's family helped Jewish families to escape, by enlisting the help of patriotic French farmers whose land bordered the unoccupied zone.
One day, her sister Stephanie forgot to use an alias and signed her real name on a coded letter to one of the farmers. The Gestapo intercepted the letter, saw it was suspicious and arrested her. They ruthlessly interrogated her, but Stephanie refused to reveal any names. Every week, on visiting day, Marthe brought Stephanie food and clothing, and they prayed together for her release from jail.
After Stephanie's arrest, the Gestapo kept a close watch on Marthe's family. Every night they pounded on the door at curfew, to make sure all members were present.
Marthe's fiance Jacques - who wasn't Jewish - knew the time would soon come for them to part. He said, "I'll write every day, and when the war's over, we'll be together all the time."
The Escape:
One night after curfew, one of Marthe's nursing classmates came to their door and warned them there was going to be a 'rafle' (police roundup of Jews) later that night. She urged them to spend the night at her house. Marthe protested that her friend was putting her life in danger. But her friend insisted.
Marthe had already begun preparations for a quick getaway, sewing several thousand francs inside the lining of her clothes. Her large family took what they could carry and made their way through the dark streets to her friend's house.
They left her house at first light, splitting into small groups to avoid attracting attention. They traveled by different routes to the border, where they hoped to walk across, aided by their forged documents.
Marthe's group was the last to attempt the crossing. It was dusk when she and her mother walked on the rural road beside her squeaking bike, while steadying her frail grandmother, who was riding on the handlebars.
Nazi officials had plastered posters everywhere near the border, offering 25,000 francs (a year's income) to farmers who prevented Jews from crossing. As the small group walked past rural farmhouses on their way to the border, people stared at them. Marthe whispered a prayer, "Dear God, protect us now."
Then a farmer bowed his head and dropped to one knee. His wife kneeled next to him and made the sign of the cross. One by one, others bowed their heads and clasped their hands in prayer as they passed. Tears ran down Marthe's cheeks as she nodded a silent thanks to them. They crossed the border safely.
After reaching the unoccupied zone, Marthe's family still faced the danger of arrest. They reunited with her brother Fred, who was now active in the Resistance. He moved the older family members to a safer place in a remote mountainous area of southern France.
Shattered Hopes:
Marthe settled in Marseille and enrolled in nursing school to finish her degree. A year later, in October 1943, she completed her nursing exams. At this time, she also received terrible news. Her fiance Jacques had been executed by the Gestapo for his acts of sabotage with the Resistance. Marthe was devastated.
Weeks earlier, she'd heard that Stephanie had been moved out of Poitiers jail. Marthe feared that her sister had been sent to a concentration camp. Her anger burned against the Nazis, for taking away those she loved.
Heartbroken, Marthe moved to Paris to live with her older sister Celine, and she soon got a job as a private nurse for a wealthy Catholic woman.
New Role as an Allied Spy:
Paris was liberated by the Allies in August 1944. but fighting still raged, as the Allies pushed on toward Germany. More than ever, Marthe wanted to do her part to defeat the Nazis.
After several attempts, Marthe was finally accepted into the French Army, and was assigned to the 151st Infantry Regiment, a former Resistance unit. Many officers dismissed her as a weak, petite girl. She had volunteered to work as a nurse, and instead was given an unimportant social worker position.
One day, she was sent to answer phones for a high ranking officer. As soon as he found out she could speak fluent French and German, he asked her if she was willing to work for the French Army's Intelligence Service. She said yes!
Marthe endured rigorous training in handling weapons, reading maps, signaling in Morse code and recognizing Nazi uniform insignia. She was the only woman in the training, and she excelled. Her trainers gave her the nickname: 'Chichinette' which means 'fussy girl' because of her stubbornness.
Her 'Aryan' appearance made her a perfect spy. Under the cover name, "Marthe Ulrich," she would enter enemy territory and pose as a German nurse looking for her missing fiance - a German soldier. This 'search' cover story would help her to approach German officers and gather information on troop placements.
With her photographic memory, Marthe gathered key details of troop movements and sent coded messages back to headquarters. She even warned them of an entire German Infantry Division hiding in the Black Forest, waiting to ambush Allied troops.
After the War:
Marthe resumed work as a nurse, eventually moving to Switzerland. She searched through detailed records of concentration camp inmates and discovered that her sister Stephanie had been killed at Auschwitz.
In 1956, Marthe met an American medical student named Major Cohn. By 1958, they were married and living in New York City. They had two sons, Stephan Jacques (named for Stephanie) and Remi Benjamin.
For her courageous wartime service, Marthe received several medals, including the French Croix de Guerre in 1945 and France's highest honor, the Medaille Militaire in 1999.
Later Life:
Marthe never forgot her wartime experiences and often suffered from bad dreams. She didn't share her story - not even with her sons - until the mid-1990s, when she began traveling around the world, giving talks promoting peace and equality.
In 2002, with the help of another writer, Marthe wrote about her life and experiences, in a book called, Behind Enemy Lines.
Her wartime experiences were harrowing and tragic, but in her talks Marthe spoke with wit and optimism, captivating her audiences. She once said, "Why wouldn't I be an optimist when so many people risked their lives to save me?"
Marthe continued traveling and sharing her story until her death on May 20, 2025, at the age of 105. I wish I had known her.
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Mary Dodge Allen is currently finishing her sequel to Hunt for a Hometown Killer. She's won a Christian Indie Award, an Angel Book Award, and two Royal Palm Literary Awards (Florida Writer's Association). She and her husband live in Central Florida. She is a member of American Christian Fiction Writers and Faith Hope and Love Christian Writers.
Saturday, July 4, 2026
Why It's Important to Celebrate Our Freedoms and Remember Our Fallen Dead
Today is Independence Day in the United States of America, marking the 250th anniversary of the formal adoption of the Declaration of Independence by the Second Continental Congress on July 4, 1776.
But there was a time when Britain and the United States worked together to defeat a common enemy, a more fearsome tyrant whose ideology and ultimate goal was to reshape Europe into a German-dominated, racially-oriented empire. Adolf Hitler wanted supreme power, ruling over conquered nations that supplied him with food and other resources, and exterminating those whom he considered undesirables. These people were not just the Jews, though they were the most visibly targeted group and resulted in the Holocaust. He also wanted to destroy the weak, the sick, the Gypsies, and the homosexuals, among others.
In August 1941, President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Winston Churchill met aboard a naval vessel in Placentia Bay, off the coast of Newfoundland, Canada, to create a joint statement—a set of principles they envisioned for the postwar world. They laid out eight shared goals and summarized them in a statement on August 14, 1941.
“. . . After final destruction of the Nazi tyranny, [we] hope to see established a peace which will afford to all nations the means of dwelling in safety within their own boundaries, and which will afford assurance that all men in all lands may live out their lives in freedom from fear and want. . . . [S]uch a peace should enable all men to traverse the high seas and oceans without hindrance.” See more on the Atlantic Charter.
After the attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, the United States and Britain cooperated militarily. It became a coordinated strategy through the Combined Chiefs of Staff, which gave a priority to defeating Nazi Germany. Several major campaigns emerged from the combined forces, the most well-known being Operation Overlord, the Allied invasion of Normandy on June 6, 1944.
American General Dwight D. Eisenhower served as Supreme Allied Commander. British, American, Canadian, and other Allied forces landed in Normandy, and the liberation of France and the rest of Europe began.
· Strategic bombing efforts;
· Intelligence gathering, particularly breaking German codes, i.e., Enigma, which enabled the Allies to track German vessels and military strategies;
While US and British leaders didn’t always agree, and tensions sometimes ran high (e.g., over the timing of D-Day), ultimately, cooperation between the two nations enabled the Allies to win the war and defeat the tyranny Hitler sought to impose on the world.
I happened to be in Libourne, France on VE-Day this past May 8, 2026, eighty-two years after the Liberation of France. All over France, they still celebrate the day, remembering the great cost paid for their freedoms against a tyrannical maniac and giving honor to those who fell in action. On D-Day itself, all totaled, 10,300 British, American, and Canadian forces perished, sacrificing their lives, so that France and all of Europe might live in freedom without fear.
| VE-Day, Libourne, France: May 2026, Donna's Gallery |
Weaving history and faith into stories of intrigue and redemption grew out of Donna's love of travel, history, and literature as a young adult while attending an international college in Wales, U.K. She enjoys developing plots that show how God's love abounds even in the profoundly difficult circumstances of our lives. Her stories reflect the hunger in all of us for love, belonging, and forgiveness.
Friday, July 3, 2026
Sarah Winnemucca - Advocate and Author by Nancy J. Farrier
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| Shell Flower |
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She recalls the time when her grandfather, Chief Truckee, first saw white people entering their land. His excitement can be seen in his recorded words, “My white brothers, — my long-looked for white brothers have come at last!” Chief Truckee’s gestures of peace were ignored and despite trying many times to extend friendship to the white people, he finally gave up, hoping the next party to come through would be friendlier. His hope came true in following years when Captain Fremont and his troops accepted his friendship. Chief Truckee and his men helped fight in the Bear War to defeat the Mexican army and win California for the United States of America.![]() |
| Lewis Hopkins, Sarah's Husband |
Nancy J Farrier is an award-winning, New York Times best-selling author who lives in Southern Arizona in the Sonoran Desert. She loves the Southwest with its interesting historical past. When Nancy isn’t writing, she loves to read, do needlecraft, play with her cats and dog, and spend time with her family. You can read more about Nancy and her books on her website: nancyjfarrier.com.





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