Choctaw Kisses, Bullets & Blood
Civil war boy-soldier Victor Moreau Locke flees a revenge killing in Tennessee and winds up wounded, ragged, and penniless in Indian Territory. Rescued by a Choctaw couple, he works for a merchant, elopes with an Indian princess, and, intelligent and ambitious, rises to political power, Locke aspires to become chief of the Choctaws, but is disqualified by lack of Indian blood. However, son Victor Jr., a quarter-breed, is elected for a brief span. An actual political war breaks out in 1893 and the Locke mansion is "shot to pieces." This true story encompasses historic coal mining and railroad imbroglios, and betrayal of Indian treaties by the U.S.Government.
1103239771
Choctaw Kisses, Bullets & Blood
Civil war boy-soldier Victor Moreau Locke flees a revenge killing in Tennessee and winds up wounded, ragged, and penniless in Indian Territory. Rescued by a Choctaw couple, he works for a merchant, elopes with an Indian princess, and, intelligent and ambitious, rises to political power, Locke aspires to become chief of the Choctaws, but is disqualified by lack of Indian blood. However, son Victor Jr., a quarter-breed, is elected for a brief span. An actual political war breaks out in 1893 and the Locke mansion is "shot to pieces." This true story encompasses historic coal mining and railroad imbroglios, and betrayal of Indian treaties by the U.S.Government.
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Choctaw Kisses, Bullets & Blood

Choctaw Kisses, Bullets & Blood

by Vance Trimble
Choctaw Kisses, Bullets & Blood

Choctaw Kisses, Bullets & Blood

by Vance Trimble

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Overview

Civil war boy-soldier Victor Moreau Locke flees a revenge killing in Tennessee and winds up wounded, ragged, and penniless in Indian Territory. Rescued by a Choctaw couple, he works for a merchant, elopes with an Indian princess, and, intelligent and ambitious, rises to political power, Locke aspires to become chief of the Choctaws, but is disqualified by lack of Indian blood. However, son Victor Jr., a quarter-breed, is elected for a brief span. An actual political war breaks out in 1893 and the Locke mansion is "shot to pieces." This true story encompasses historic coal mining and railroad imbroglios, and betrayal of Indian treaties by the U.S.Government.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940013668249
Publisher: Vance Trimble
Publication date: 01/17/2012
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 308
File size: 985 KB

About the Author

Vance H. Trimble was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for national reporting in 1960 in recognition of his exposé of nepotism and payroll abuse in the U.S. Congress. For this work, Trimblewas awarded the other two top prizes for "distinguished Washington correspondence," the Raymond Clapper and the Sigma Delta Chi, honoring him as a rarity in American journalism-- "a Triple Crown winner."
Born in Arkansas in 1913, Vance Trimble grew up in Oklahoma where at age 14 he became a cub reporter: on The Okemah Daily Leader. He went on to reporting and desk work on daily newspapers in Wewoka, Seminole, Muskogee, Okmulgee, and Tulsa.
During the Depression, Trimble freelanced as a typewriter\adding machine repairman, traveling the South for a year in a rusty $35 1926 Chevy.
In 1955, Trimble was promoted from managing editor of The Houston Press to news editor of the Scripps-Howard national bureau in Washington, D.C.
"I grew a little restless by my desk job," says Trimble. "In Houston, I was under deadline pressure, working fast. My new job seemed to slow. So in my spare time, I began roaming Capitol Hill."
Soon his digging unearthed scandalous nepotism and payroll shenanigans in Congressional offices. The Scripps-Howard news wire planted his daily stories on page ones from New York to San Francisco. These exclusives continued for six months. TIME magazine admiringly profiled him as "The Digger on Capitol Hill." The cheating revelations outraged the public. Because of this grass roots outcry, the U. S. Senate, voted to relax its secrecy on office payrolls. In its page 1 headline, The Washington Daily News hailed this as "A Victory for the Taxpayers and Vance Trimble."
Trimble is author of 13 hardcover books, the first being a history of hyperbaric medicine. Others include bios of Sam Walton, FedEx's Fred Smith, publisher E.W. Scripps, baseball commissioner "Happy" Chandler.
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