Jane Long of Texas

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Pelican Publishing, Apr 30, 2000 - Fiction - 312 pages

A novel based on the true-life story of a woman who shaped Texas history by playing an instrumental role in the Texas Revolution.
 
Regarded by many as the “Mother of Texas,” Jane Wilkinson Long is curiously absent from most history books. Now, this painstakingly researched novelization reveals the fascinating life of the little girl who would grow up to become both a spy and revolutionary in Texas’s fight for independence from Mexico.

Against her family’s wishes, the wealthy and headstrong Jane, at the age of sixteen, married Dr. James Long, a veteran of the War of 1812, who hoped to use his wife’s fortune to build an army to conquer “Tejas.” In fighting for his lost cause, Long lost his life in Mexico City. His wife, extremely suspicious of the circumstances surrounding his death, set out on a quest to solve the mystery. Her mission would soon lead her into Texas . . . and into the annals of history.

 

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Contents

Prologue
1
Beginnings
3
Interlude
71
The Years Alone
123
Revolution
219
Mother Of Texas
287
Epilogue
291
Afterword
293
Authors Note
295
Acknowledgements
297
Thanks
299
Copyright

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About the author (2000)

An accomplished author, video writer, and producer, Petrick has won national and regional awards for her work, including the silver medal at the New York Film Video Festival, the Associated Press Managing Editors Award for writing, and two Matrix awards. Petrick received her bachelor of journalism degree from the University of Texas at Austin and her master of arts degree in interdisciplinary studies at the University of Texas in Dallas. She lives in McKinney, Texas, with her husband, Tom.

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