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The Two Sams: Men of the West. F. M. WordenЧитать онлайн книгу.

The Two Sams: Men of the West - F. M. Worden


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       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

       Cover

       Chapter 1: Sam the Father

       Chapter 2: The Farmer

       Chapter 3: Slave Owner

       Chapter 4: Death Comes Early

       Sam the Son

       Chapter 5: On His Own

       Chapter 6: Fort Laramie

       Chapter 7: The Maiden Fawn

       Chapter 8: Fawn and Sam

       Chapter 9: Life with Fawn

       Chapter 10: Hunter, Lawman

       Chapter 11: Sylvia, Texas Rangers

       The Arizona Saga Begins

       Chapter 12: Tucson, Arizona Territory

       Chapter 13: Shooting of the Greek, Dance

       Chapter 14: Apaches – Horse Race – Mexican Cowboy

       Chapter 15: Tombstone

       Chapter 16: Louise-Rosa-Sam

       About the Author

       Other books by F. W. Worden

       Back Cover

      The Two Sams

      Men of the West

      by

      F. M. Worden

      CCB Publishing

      British Columbia, Canada

      The Two Sams: Men of the West

      Copyright ©2012 by F. M. Worden

      ISBN-13 978-1-927360-48-4

      Third Edition

      Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication

      Worden, F. M., 1930-

      The two Sams: men of the west / written by F. M. Worden – 3rd ed.

      ISBN 978-1-927360-48-4

      Also available in print format.

      I. Title.

      PS3623.O74 T96 2009 813.6 C2009-900632-4

      Additional cataloguing data available from Library and Archives Canada

      Disclaimer: The book The Two Sams is purely fictional. Any reference to places or persons living or dead is strictly coincidental. The author intends no harm or injury to anyone.

      Extreme care has been taken to ensure that all information presented in this book is accurate and up to date at the time of publishing. Neither the author nor the publisher can be held responsible for any errors or omissions. Additionally, neither is any liability assumed for damages resulting from the use of the information contained herein.

      All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without the express written permission of the publisher.

      Publisher:

      CCB Publishing

      British Columbia, Canada

       www.ccbpublishing.com

      An American story of a father and son in the 1800’s, making their way in the American West.

       Chapter 1

      Sam the Father

      Jess Duncan, was born in the colony of Virginia in the year 1758 to an Irish and Scottish family. He was the third son of a religious father and mother, he had five brothers and one sister.

      At seventeen, Jess joined the Army of northern Virginia and went to war with General George Washington. When the Revolutionary War ended in 1783, upon returning home, he married his boyhood sweetheart, a Pennsylvania born, Dutch girl named, Greta Miller.

      Jess took his new bride and moved to the Tennessee Valley to claim the land, one hundred and sixty acres, he received as a bonus for fighting in the war. On the claim, the two built a farm with their own bare hands and a mule. The work was hard. It was not easy for Greta to conceive or bear children. Jess couldn’t understand it, he wanted a big family. Finally a son was born in the year of 1788, he was named David, after David in the bible who became a king. It took four more years before another son was born, he was named Samuel, after the man who had God’s ear in the bible.

      In the years that followed, the farming was hard and they didn’t prosper too well. Jess took to drinking. When he had too much, he was mean and bad tempered, he took the bad times out on David and David in turn took it out on Sam.

      At fourteen young Sam had enough of his brother’s bad treatment. He told his Ma, “I’m gonna go west, I want-a be my own man.” His Ma understood how he felt. She told him, if that’s what he really wanted, he should go. He told his Ma how much he loved her and his Pa too but he had to go on his own. He was a big strapping boy. Almost six feet tall and weighing a hundred and sixty pounds. He told his Ma, “Don’t be a fret-en. I can take care of myself.” She wanted to stop him but she knew in her heart it would be best for him to go find what he was looking for.

      After midnight, on a spring morning, Sam took his leave. With only a burlap sack of food his Ma had fixed, a blanket, a knife and the clothes on his back, he started walking west. By walking and hitching rides, he reached the town of Memphis, a port town on the Mississippi River.

      There he found a job on the docks as a roustabout. He met lots of people that travel the river. He heard of places up north and of men going west to find their fortunes. He soon had an itch to see the places he was hearing about. Somehow the


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