Description

Based on a true story, Wagon Wheels tells a powerful and overlooked story of the country''s post-Civil War era.

Formerly enslaved Ed Muldie and his family travel to Kansas in 1878 to claim land under the Homestead Act. Mother dies on the journey from Kentucky. The family joins a free Black community in Nicodemus, Kansas. They survive a difficult winter thanks to help from the Osage Native community. But in spring Daddy must leave the boys to find better land for farming.

The two older boys, eleven and eight, take care of their three-year-old brother in these difficult times. Then a letter arrives via Pony Express. Daddy has settled and gives the boys a map to follow. The three boys must begin their own journey. They must care for one another as they travel 150 miles on foot to join him in their new home.

The Muldies'' story gives beginning readers a glimpse of homesteaders'' life and, specifically, an awareness of the Black groups in Kansa

Wagon Wheels

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£7.17

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Paperback by Barbara Brenner

2 in stock

Short Description:

Based on a true story, Wagon Wheels tells a powerful and overlooked story of the country''s post-Civil War era.Formerly enslaved... Read more

    Publisher: HarperCollins
    Publication Date: 1/23/1984
    ISBN13: 9780064440523, 978-0064440523
    ISBN10: 0064440524

    Children & Teen , Baby, Toddler & Pre-School

    Description

    Based on a true story, Wagon Wheels tells a powerful and overlooked story of the country''s post-Civil War era.

    Formerly enslaved Ed Muldie and his family travel to Kansas in 1878 to claim land under the Homestead Act. Mother dies on the journey from Kentucky. The family joins a free Black community in Nicodemus, Kansas. They survive a difficult winter thanks to help from the Osage Native community. But in spring Daddy must leave the boys to find better land for farming.

    The two older boys, eleven and eight, take care of their three-year-old brother in these difficult times. Then a letter arrives via Pony Express. Daddy has settled and gives the boys a map to follow. The three boys must begin their own journey. They must care for one another as they travel 150 miles on foot to join him in their new home.

    The Muldies'' story gives beginning readers a glimpse of homesteaders'' life and, specifically, an awareness of the Black groups in Kansa

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