Port Townsend, 1851. Where the Strait of Juan de Fuca meets Puget Sound, a schooner drops anchor in waters the S'Klallam have fished for millennia. The settlers aboard see an empty harbor waiting for civilization. Chief Chetzemoka sees something else entirely: a future he can glimpse but cannot prevent.
Elizabeth Morrison arrives with the first wave, a Boston widow seeking reinvention in the territories. She builds a customs brokerage, accumulates property, raises two daughters—and keeps a cipher journal recording everything the official histories will erase. The treaties broken before the ink dries. The village burned to make room for mansions. The systematic dispossession dressed up as progress.
Chetzemoka chooses accommodation over resistance, signing away his people's land in exchange for promises of fishing rights and reserved territory. It's a gamble on the long game—that words on paper might matter to someone, someday, when circumstances change. His son Joseph inherits that burden, waiting decades for the moment when the settlers' certainties finally crack.
That moment comes in 1890, when the railroad boom that was supposed to make Port Townsend a great city collapses into economic ruin. The speculators flee. Property values crash. And in the wreckage, possibilities emerge that didn't exist before.
Spanning forty-four years of territorial history, Where Two Waters Meet tells the story of American expansion through the eyes of those who built it and those who survived it. Based on documented events and featuring the real S'Klallam leader Chetzemoka—known to settlers as "the Duke of York"—this novel explores what happens when one community's prosperity requires another's destruction, and what it costs to remember what everyone else prefers to forget.
The S'Klallam people—the "Strong People"—never disappeared. Their nations persist on their traditional territories today.
For readers of Barkskins and Cloud Cuckoo Land, this is a story of those who fight to hold onto their place in a changing world.
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Da: GreatBookPrices, Columbia, MD, U.S.A.
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Da: Grand Eagle Retail, Bensenville, IL, U.S.A.
Paperback. Condizione: new. Paperback. Port Townsend, 1851. Where the Strait of Juan de Fuca meets Puget Sound, a schooner drops anchor in waters the S'Klallam have fished for millennia. The settlers aboard see an empty harbor waiting for civilization. Chief Chetzemoka sees something else entirely: a future he can glimpse but cannot prevent.Elizabeth Morrison arrives with the first wave, a Boston widow seeking reinvention in the territories. She builds a customs brokerage, accumulates property, raises two daughters-and keeps a cipher journal recording everything the official histories will erase. The treaties broken before the ink dries. The village burned to make room for mansions. The systematic dispossession dressed up as progress.Chetzemoka chooses accommodation over resistance, signing away his people's land in exchange for promises of fishing rights and reserved territory. It's a gamble on the long game-that words on paper might matter to someone, someday, when circumstances change. His son Joseph inherits that burden, waiting decades for the moment when the settlers' certainties finally crack.That moment comes in 1890, when the railroad boom that was supposed to make Port Townsend a great city collapses into economic ruin. The speculators flee. Property values crash. And in the wreckage, possibilities emerge that didn't exist before.Spanning forty-four years of territorial history, Where Two Waters Meet tells the story of American expansion through the eyes of those who built it and those who survived it. Based on documented events and featuring the real S'Klallam leader Chetzemoka-known to settlers as "the Duke of York"-this novel explores what happens when one community's prosperity requires another's destruction, and what it costs to remember what everyone else prefers to forget.The S'Klallam people-the "Strong People"-never disappeared. Their nations persist on their traditional territories today.For readers of Barkskins and Cloud Cuckoo Land, this is a story of those who fight to hold onto their place in a changing world. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability. Codice articolo 9798312425963
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Da: PBShop.store UK, Fairford, GLOS, Regno Unito
PAP. Condizione: New. New Book. Shipped from UK. Established seller since 2000. Codice articolo L2-9798312425963
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Da: GreatBookPricesUK, Woodford Green, Regno Unito
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Da: CitiRetail, Stevenage, Regno Unito
Paperback. Condizione: new. Paperback. In the mid-19th century, as settlers push into the Pacific Northwest, two worlds struggle to coexist. The S'Klallam people have lived along these shores for generations, but now their lands and waters are being divided, mapped, and claimed by newcomers seeking prosperity. At the heart of this sweeping epic are those who resist, adapt, and endure.From the cautious first meetings in 1851 to the upheavals of war, railroad expansion, and economic collapse, Where Two Waters Meet follows generations of families-S'Klallam leaders, settlers, traders, and outcasts-whose fates become entangled in the town's rapid transformation. Elizabeth Morrison, a widowed entrepreneur, builds a boarding house that becomes a quiet center of defiance. Tukweb, a young S'Klallam fisherman, preserves ancestral knowledge while navigating shifting power structures. Sarah Morrison-Tukweb walks a dangerous line between two cultures, ensuring that vital traditions are not lost.As land is surveyed and waters are restricted, knowledge becomes a weapon, and resistance takes many forms-from coded maritime charts to underground networks of trade and education. Against the forces of displacement, exploitation, and exclusion, those who remember the tides find ways to survive.Spanning forty years, this Port Townsend saga is a deeply researched and compelling historical novel about identity, resilience, and the untold histories buried beneath maps and ledgers. For readers of Barkskins and Cloud Cuckoo Land, this is a story of those who fight to hold onto their place in a changing world. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our UK warehouse or from our Australian or US warehouses, depending on stock availability. Codice articolo 9798312425963
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