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Beginning around the turn of the 20th century, people flocked to boom towns like Greenbackville and Franklin City on Virginias remote Chincoteague Bay to cash in on the lucrative oyster trade. Most eventually settled for simple rural lives, living a cash and barter economy, commuting on foot or by boat, always closely tied to the tide and water. From mystery in the marsh to jealous lovers, these accounts of life on the Bay are filled with work boats, crab pots, and saltwater.

Produktbeschreibung
Beginning around the turn of the 20th century, people flocked to boom towns like Greenbackville and Franklin City on Virginias remote Chincoteague Bay to cash in on the lucrative oyster trade. Most eventually settled for simple rural lives, living a cash and barter economy, commuting on foot or by boat, always closely tied to the tide and water. From mystery in the marsh to jealous lovers, these accounts of life on the Bay are filled with work boats, crab pots, and saltwater.
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Autorenporträt
As "come 'eres"--newcomers--to the Eastern Shore, authors Martha A. Burns and Linda S. Hartsock bring a fresh perspective to life on t he Bay. They present here t he memories of a vanishing way of life in rural America, largely in the words of those who lived it and worked it. Much of the language, insights, and emotion of t he last century are here for all to read, coupled with the authors' observations and interpretations of t heir neighbors and the bay they call home.