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Taylor continued to write fiction and biographies, including one on Winston Churchill. [citation needed] Taylor's 1958 novel The Travels of Jaimie McPheeters, about a 14-year-old and his father in the California Gold Rush, won the Pulitzer Prize and was purchased for a film, but eventually became a television series, instead. [3]
B. Richard Bach; Rosecrans Baldwin; Blue Balliett; Ann Bannon; Kathleen Barber; Margaret Ayer Barnes; Harriet Bates; Joan Bauer (novelist) L. Frank Baum; Charles Beaumont
C. Allan B. Calhamer; Margaret Cameron (author) Alexander Campbell (Illinois politician) Clara Cannucciari; William Carlin; Gerald Carson (writer) Peter Cartwright (revivalist)
Novels set in Illinois. Subcategories. This category has the following 2 subcategories, out of 2 total. C. Novels set in Chicago (2 C, 129 P) G.
ISBN 0-451-52760-7, on Modern Library's 100 Best Novels Theodore Dreiser The Titan: 1914 Tim LaHaye and Jerry B. Jenkins: Apollyon: 1998 Upton Sinclair: The Jungle: 1906 ISBN 1-884365-30-2 [6] Veronica Roth: Divergent: 2011 Set in post-apocalyptic Chicago - #1 on the Children's Paperback list in 2012 Veronica Roth Insurgent: 2012 Veronica Roth ...
Robert Rochon Taylor (April 12, 1899 – March 1, 1957) was an American housing advocate and banker. A founder of the Illinois Federal Savings and Loan, a mortgager for black residents of Chicago's South Side, Taylor was the first black member of the Chicago Housing Authority and later its chairman.
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Thomas Awerkamp, Illinois State Senator and businessman; Horace S. Cooley, Illinois Secretary of State; Laura Kent Donahue, Illinois State Senator; Stephen Arnold Douglas, youngest supreme court justice in Illinois history (27 years old); ran as a Democrat against Abraham Lincoln in the 1860 election [17] Mary Lou Kent, Illinois state legislator