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A
richly detailed history of the early Upper Mississippi as the major
highway into America's Midwest frontier for Native Americans and
for pioneers. Birchbark canoes, romantic passenger steamboats, log
rafts, and grain barges all traveled Mark Twain's river. The commercial
life of the Mississippi ended with the coming of the railroad. Dams
and locks then constricted the river, bringing floods and dumping
refuse and sewage into the water.
Ignored
and abused, the river was disregarded by communities for over a
century. Today the Mississippi River is in the midst of a renaissance.
Now, with the water clean enough to swim in, environmentalists and
developers use the river thoughtfully. No longer shunning this water
lifeline, communities are returning to its banks for housing, recreation
and pleasure.
River
of Conflict, River of Dreams is a hefty-size trade paperback
that should enrich the library of any boater who ever read Mark
Twain, listened to the tunes of "Showboat," or just plain
dreamed of boating more and further on Old Man River. --Marlin
Bree. THE ENSIGN of the U. S. Power Squadron
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