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Idaho Falls

Autor William Hathaway
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 29 noi 2006
Taylor's Crossing began as a wooden toll bridge over a narrow spot on the Snake River for travelers along the Old Montana Trail. By 1883, it was known as Eagle Rock, a dusty outpost for railroad workers, bullwhackers, and miners. "We can not claim an orderly town," the newspaper reported. "The reckless firing of firearms at all hours of the day and night is a nuisance that should be stopped." When the railroad pulled out its shops, the town almost died. Following statehood and another name change, Idaho Falls transformed itself into an agricultural center and outfitting point for visitors to Yellowstone Park. In 1949, the Atomic Energy Commission arrived, and the nearby desert became a training ground for the nuclear navy, the test site for a new "inherently safe" boiling-water reactor design and the location of the world's first fatal nuclear accident.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781531630157
ISBN-10: 1531630154
Pagini: 130
Dimensiuni: 175 x 250 x 12 mm
Greutate: 0.42 kg
Editura: Arcadia Publishing Library Editions

Descriere

Descriere de la o altă ediție sau format:
Taylor's Crossing began as a wooden toll bridge over a narrow spot on the Snake River for travelers along the Old Montana Trail. By 1883, it was known as Eagle Rock, a dusty outpost for railroad workers, bullwhackers, and miners. "We can not claim an orderly town," the newspaper reported. "The reckless firing of firearms at all hours of the day and night is a nuisance that should be stopped." When the railroad pulled out its shops, the town almost died. Following statehood and another name change, Idaho Falls transformed itself into an agricultural center and outfitting point for visitors to Yellowstone Park. In 1949, the Atomic Energy Commission arrived, and the nearby desert became a training ground for the nuclear navy, the test site for a new "inherently safe" boiling-water reactor design and the location of the world's first fatal nuclear accident.

Notă biografică

This retrospective relies on newspaper and Museum of Idaho archives and local family histories. Author William Hathaway is a newspaperman and fourth-generation eastern Idahoan whose ancestors were teamsters on the Old Montana Trail, canal-builders, and homesteaders. Recently he supervised the Idaho Falls Post Register's 125th-anniversary history project. This book is an extension of that project.