Two men, two dreams, two new towns on the
plains, and a railroad that will determine whether the towns—one black, one
white—live or die.
Will Crump has survived the Civil War, Red Cloud’s War, and the loss of his love, but the search for peace and belonging still eludes him. From Colorado, famed Texas Ranger Charlie Goodnight lures Will to Texas, where he finds new love, but can a Civil War sharpshooter and a Quaker find a compromise to let their love survive? When Will has a chance to join in the founding of a new town, he risks everything—his savings, his family, and his life—but it will all be for nothing if the new railroad passes them by.
Luther has escaped slavery in Kentucky through Albinia, Will’s sister, only to find prejudice rearing its ugly head in Indiana. When the Black Codes are passed, he’s forced to leave and begin a new odyssey. Where can he and his family go to be truly free? Can they start a town owned by blacks, run by blacks, with no one to answer to? But their success will be dependent on the almighty railroad and overcoming bigotry to prove their town deserves the chance to thrive.
Will’s eldest sister, Julia, and her husband, Hiram, are watching the demise of their steamboat business and jump into railroads, but there’s a long black shadow in the form of Jay Gould, the robber baron who ruthlessly swallows any business he considers competition. Can Julia fight the rules against women in business, dodge Gould, and hold her marriage together?
The Founding tells the little-known story of the Exodusters and Nicodemus, the black town on the plains of Kansas, and the parallel story of Will’s founding of Lubbock, Texas, against the background of railroad expansion in America. A family reunited, new love discovered, the quest for freedom, the rise of two towns. In the end, can they reach Across the Great Divide? The Founding is the exciting conclusion to the series.
Praise for The Founding:
“Michael is an excellent storyteller and has done a wonderful job depicting Luther, and the other black characters in this book. He has done his homework and depicts many historical facts about Nicodemus in a most enlightening and creative way. It has been a pleasure working with someone who has made a concerted effort to get things right.
Executive Director
The Nicodemus Historical Society and Museum
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Michael Ross
The Atchison, Topeka, Santa Fe railroad had as its president at one point one of the most incompetent Confederate generals - Braxton Bragg
170,000 miles of railroad tracks were laid in 1860-1900. Some of it was never used. 140,000 miles of tracks are in use today. Old railroad tracks are recycled as metal T posts for fencing.
It took one full year (minus a month for COVID) to research and write The Founding.
I re-visited Lubbock, Texas in March 2022, spending a few days at the Southwest Collection at Texas Tech University. They have huge boxes of paper material on the Crumps, none digitized. It includes such material as the genealogy of all the cows Will Crump raised, deeds for land, court cases, and - my thrill - papers signed by Will Crump, his wife Mary, his son Bob, and my own parents and grandparents.
Nicodemus still exists, and people still live there - it may not be thriving, but this quiet little town in western Kansas still has the heartbeat of history. In its heyday, it produced two famous NFL running backs (the families have requested me not to identify them), a state auditor, and its own newspaper.
Angela Bates is the driving force behind Nicodemus today.
Kansas Historical Foundation
Board of Directors
Elected to board: 1995
Elected to executive committee: 2007
Angela Bates’s ancestors were among the
original settlers of Nicodemus in 1877. She grew up in Pasadena, California,
but her family’s trips to Kansas drew her to relocate to the state. She
received a bachelor’s degree in education from Emporia State University.
Bates has devoted much of her career to
sharing the history of African American migration and the preservation of
history and architecture in Nicodemus. She is a member of the National Parks
Conservation Association and the National Trust for Historic Preservation. She
served as president of the Nicodemus Historical Society. She shares her stories
through performances, documentaries, radio, and television.
She received the Kansas Sampler
Foundation’s “We Can” award for her work in historic preservation. She received
the Brown Foundation’s award for excellence in preserving African American
history. She has been honored by the Kansas Humanities Council for outstanding
contributions. The National Trust named her a “Preservation Hero.” She was
named a woman of distinction by the Martin Luther King, Jr., Memorial Committee
of Topeka.
Bates was first elected to the Kansas
Historical Foundation Board of Directors in 1995 where she served until 2016.
Michael Ross is a lover of history and great stories.
He’s a retired software engineer turned author, with three children, and five grandchildren, living in Newton, Kansas with his wife of 39 years. Michael graduated from Rice University and Portland State University with degrees in German and software engineering. He was part of an MBA program at Boston University.
Michael was born in Lubbock, Texas, and still loves Texas. He’s written short stories and technical articles in the past, as well as articles for the Texas Historical Society.
Across the Great Divide now has three novels in the series, "The Clouds of War", and "The Search", and the conclusion, "The Founding". "The Clouds of War" was an honorable mention for Coffee Pot Book of the Year in 2019, and an Amazon #1 best seller in three categories, along with making the Amazon top 100 paid, reviewed in Publisher's Weekly. "The Search" won Coffee Pot Cover of the Year in 2020, and Coffee Pot Silver Medal for Book of the Year in 2020, as well as shortlisted for the Chanticleer International Book Laramie Award.
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Thank you for hosting Michael L. Ross today, with his Fun Facts! x
ReplyDeleteMy pleasure.
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