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  2. Maine penny - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maine_penny

    The Maine penny, also referred to as the Goddard coin, is a Norwegian silver coin dating to the reign of Olaf Kyrre King of Norway (1067–1093 AD). It was claimed to be discovered in Maine in 1957, and it has been suggested as evidence of Pre-Columbian trans-oceanic contact .

  3. Goddard Site - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goddard_Site

    A coin similar to the Maine penny. Unusual finds at the site include worked copper, including some of European origin that were found in a Late Ceramic period grave of two children, alongside clay artifacts. [3] The most unusual find, however, is the Maine penny, a silver coin of Norse origin, dating to the reign of Olaf Kyrre (1067–1093 AD ...

  4. Elisabeth Ogilvie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elisabeth_Ogilvie

    Many of her novels dealt with life in Maine and lobstering families along the coast. She also wrote a series of novels set in Scotland, inspired by her Scottish descent and her travels there. [ 1 ] In 1950, Ogilvie published an autobiographical book, My World is an Island , about her life on Gay Island.

  5. Talk:Maine penny - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Maine_penny

    This entry should be updated in the light of the discussion of the Maine Penny in Gordon Campbell's Norse America: the Story of a Founding Myth (Oxford University Press, 2021), pp. 167-72. Unlike far too much of what has been written about the Northmen in North America this is a sober, non-partisan and scholarly book.

  6. Carolyn Chute - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carolyn_Chute

    Carolyn Chute (born Carolyn Penny; June 14, 1947) is an American writer and populist political activist who is strongly identified with the culture of poor, rural western Maine. Rod Dreher , writing in The American Conservative , has referred to Chute as "a Maine novelist and gun enthusiast who, along with her husband, lives an aggressively ...

  7. Castle Rock (Stephen King) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Castle_Rock_(Stephen_King)

    The population of Castle Rock was 1,280 by 1959 and around 1,500 in Needful Things.According to the book cover, Needful Things was "The Last Castle Rock Story". However, the town later served as the setting for the short story "It Grows on You", published in King's 1993 collection Nightmares & Dreamscapes.

  8. The Austere Academy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Austere_Academy

    [1] was set to be a paperback release of The Austere Academy, designed to mimic Victorian penny dreadfuls. The book was set to include approximately seven new illustrations, and the fifth part of a serial supplement entitled The Cornucopian Cavalcade, which was to include a 13-part comic by Michael Kupperman entitled The Spoily Brats, and an ...

  9. Americana series - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Americana_series

    Indeed, this was the first American definitive series in which no male human being appeared, and the two female figures in the set are purely allegorical, rather than representing actual women. The preceding Prominent Americans series had been deliberately produced without basic design guidelines, resulting in widely diverse pictorial and ...