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Horror Helplessness and Humanity WWII and the Dutch: The Windmills of War

Autor Dianne Swingle, Dean Swingle
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 15 noi 2009
Have you ever heard it said: "A Picture is worth a 1,000 Words?" As you look at these pictures from 65 - 70 years ago... Study each one and look for the 1,000 words. These were Real people... Real times... Real events... During WW II in Holland. I was a very young girl when my sister married Klaas, so I'm going on actual stories about their lives together and Klaas' Family in wartime 1940-1945. What follows is history, my recollections of Holland. I inherited these historical documents when my sister Thelma Prins died and these papers were the last remnants of her husband Klaas Prins. Klaas died first of cancer, then my sister died of cancer and pneumonia years later. Klaas Prins designs new marine 150-ton floating derrick, which is the largest unit of its kind ever, built in the United States at that time. It was designed by George P. Wagner Associates, New York City; was build under the general supervision of the Morrow Manufacturing Company who Klaas was employed by.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781449532079
ISBN-10: 1449532071
Pagini: 118
Dimensiuni: 203 x 254 x 8 mm
Greutate: 0.25 kg
Editura: CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform
Locul publicării:North Charleston SC, United States

Descriere

Have you ever heard it said: "A Picture is worth a 1,000 Words?" As you look at these pictures from 65 - 70 years ago... Study each one and look for the 1,000 words. These were Real people... Real times... Real events... During WW II in Holland. I was a very young girl when my sister married Klaas, so I'm going on actual stories about their lives together and Klaas' Family in wartime 1940-1945. What follows is history, my recollections of Holland. I inherited these historical documents when my sister Thelma Prins died and these papers were the last remnants of her husband Klaas Prins. Klaas died first of cancer, then my sister died of cancer and pneumonia years later. Klaas Prins designs new marine 150-ton floating derrick, which is the largest unit of its kind ever, built in the United States at that time. It was designed by George P. Wagner Associates, New York City; was build under the general supervision of the Morrow Manufacturing Company who Klaas was employed by.