Saturday, January 10, 2009

History of the American Steam Fire Engine or White House Confidential

History of the American Steam Fire-Engine

Author: William T King

Over 100 rare illustrations depict more than 70 antique fire engines with steam-powered pumps — from the very first one, built in 1829, to the end of the 19th century. Include the Braithwaite's "Comet"; the Manhattan No. 8 of New York City; the Hurricane No. 13 of Philadelphia; the Northern Liberty, No. 8, of Boston; more.



See also: Freedom or The Puritan Dilemma

White House Confidential

Author: Gregg Stebben

Most Americans believe that in the past our presidents were smarter, more honest, and behaved more like gentleman than those we elect today. “Not so,” say Gregg Stebben and Austin Hill. “Long before Watergate, Contragate, Travelgate, Nannygate, and Monicagate, our presidents were lying, cheating, stealing, and womanizing.”

White House: Confidential is a clear-eyed look at America’s long line of presidents, warts and all. Focusing on the qualities that never made it into the press releases, the authors look at the strange family relationships, scandals that engulfed their administrations, fights with enemies, and questionable money matters. A “presidential score card” of which presidents cheated on their wives (and with whom), random acts of goofy presidential behavior, their frequently accurate predictions of their own demise, their comments on leaving office, how they died, presidential firsts, and the role of vice presidents—all of these topics and much more made the first edition of White House: Confidential controversial when it was published in 1998.

Two new chapters have been added in this revised and updated edition. The first, “Impeached!” looks at how impeachment and the threat of impeachment have affected several presidents. The second, “Nepotism! A Family Affair!” shows how presidential relatives have exploited their connections. Yet others have used a relative’s presidency as a springboard to their own. Also included are all kinds of goofy family-related high jinks (in the spirit of characters like Billy Carter).



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