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American Association for State and Local History (2002), Directory of historical organizations in the United States and Canada (15th ed.), Walnut Creek, CA: AltaMira Press, ISBN 9780759100022 – via archive.org; 2022 National Census of History Organizations, American Association for State and Local History
Local history: website, area history, mining Raymond Museum: Raymond: Madera: Local history: website, also known as Charles Miller House Reedley Museum: Reedley: Fresno: Local history: website, operated by the Reedley Historical Society, Facebook site: Ridge Route Communities Museum and Historical Society: Frazier Park: Kern: Local history
The museum's Free Summer Sundays offer families a free museum tour as well as historic youth crafts and games. Monthly lecture and music programs allows visitors to explore Moravian and local history through lectures, music, screenings, and various family activities.
With millions of people living in the U.S.A., it’s often challenging to find a school friend you are no longer in touch with or a family member whose contact information you lost years ago.
On December 27, 1940, the Conference of State and Local History met and disbanded itself. Then the American Association for State and Local History was born. Its first charter stated that AASLH's purpose was, simply, “the promotion of effort and activity in the fields of state, provincial, and local history in the United States and Canada.” [4]
Examples of local history books about people and monuments in the province of Pistoia. Local history tends to be less documented than other types, with fewer books and artifacts than that of a country or continent. Many local histories are recorded as oral tales or stories and so are more vulnerable than more well known issues.
Local history: Operated by Riverside County Parks, late 19th-century homestead ranch house, museum with a collection of authentic wagons and saddles Goffs Schoolhouse: Goffs: San Bernardino: Local history: Restored one-room schoolhouse with displays of local history, operated by the Mojave Desert Heritage and Cultural Association
Gullah Geechee people are descendants of West Africans brought here as part of the slave trade. They were brought here because of their knowledge to control water and manage the lands, Hemingway said.