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It has not been edited and may therefore contain several errors.


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Because of the lack of bridges, residents and merchants were carried across the Jourdan River by barge.
I w/ccessfr/l squirrel hunt in the 1880's for Gene Joyner, U"tn. Watts and Bud ( uneo.
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Small boys >jf 1898 loved to parade.
NDREW J. LOTT was ferry-man on the Jourdnn River near .iln in 1908 when this picture was taken showing his family Dgether with his <lster-la-law and her children.
’hoto courtesy of Jack Lott.
PAULINE'S LANDING Pauline'a Landing was a pick-up and departure point in the 1800's. The facilities located there were a small grocery store, school, and meeting area. Merchants, local residents, and Indians traded their wares. Wooden barges, Leaded with produce, horse-drawn carriages were pulled across the Jourdan River from cne bank to the other. Since that 'hustle-and-bustle1 time, Jourdan River Shores Subdivision came into being. A man-made lake was dug which is now named Holder. Lake, in the background, this forms a peninsula now overgrown with trees and underbrush.
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Kiln History Document (042)
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