Artwork by Hatty Ruth Miller, Lumbee artist  
 
Category: 31. The Lumbee River; environment and environmentalism

This category currently contains 26 items.

HOW0001. "How to utilize a cypress swamp." Scientific American March 10 1888: 152.

1051. “Lumberton as it now is. With a brief sketch of its early organization and the origin of its name.” Robesonian 10 May 1904: 1.

1052. McNeill, John Charles. “Lumber River.” 1905. Rpt. in Robesonian Feb. 1951 (Robeson County Historical Edition): Sec. 2 p. 1.

OLDS002. Olds, Fred A. "Indian anglers." Forest and stream February 3, 1912: 147, 60.

1053. Britt, Albert. “Down the Lumbee.” Outing 80 (Sept. 1922): 262-64.

1054. “Lumbee young-old river, noted author Gerald Johnson says.” Pembroke Progress 27 Nov. 1947: Sec. 2 p. 1.

WALT001. Walton, Trudy. “Lumber River took many lives, inspired poets and bootleggers.” News and Observer (Raleigh, NC) Sunday, 1 February 1948: 1.

1055. “Name of the River.” Robesonian 6 May 1971: 22.

1056. “Traditional Label.” Robesonian 7 May 1971: [8].

1057. Moe, Susan Spence. “River Weaves Close-Knit Community.” News and Observer 19 Sept. 1976: Sec. 3 p. 2.

1058. Bauer, Ursula. “The River That Wouldn’t Die.” Environmental Politics: Lessons from the Grassroots. Ed. Bob Hall. Durham: Institute for Southern Studies, 1988. Pp. 70-79.

1059. Regan, Richard. “The Lumber River, The Lumbee Indians, and GSX, Inc., Robeson County, North Carolina.” The Egg [CRESP, Cornell U, Ithaca, NY] Winter 1987-1988: 10-11.

REGA001. Regan, Richard. “A river too good to waste.” Christian Social Action 2 (March 1989): 14-15.

1060. Regan, Richard. “Building multi-racial environmental conditions that work.” The Egg 9.4 (Winter 1989-90): 14-15.

1061. Regan, Richard, and Mac Legerton. “Economic slavery or hazardous wastes? Robeson County’s Economic Menu.” Communities in Economic Crisis: Appalachia and the South. Philadelphia: Temple UP, 1990. Pp. 146-57.

1062. “Judge rules EPA can't interfere with N.C. waste facility sitings.” Robesonian 13 April 1990: 1.

1063. Ash, Andrew N. A Preliminary Natural Areas Inventory of the Lumber River Floodplain. A Report Submitted to the North Carolina Natural Heritage Program [and] North Carolina Nature Conservancy. [Raleigh]: NC Dept. of Environment, Health, and Natural Resources, 14 Nov. 1990.

1064. Bridgers, John Bracey. “Groundwater pollution potential: a case study of Robeson County, North Carolina.” Thesis. Appalachian State U, December 1991.

SHIF001. Shiffer, James Eli. “Lazy river.” (travel column.) News and Observer (Raleigh, NC) 30 June 1996: H1.

HORA001. Horan, Jack. “Go with the flow; outdoor enthusiasts, U.S. recognize Lumber River's charms.” Charlotte Observer 10 December 1998: 6B.

PEMB001. “Pembroke resident named chairman of national foundation.”  Carolina Indian Voice 25 February 1999:1.

MCKI001. McKinnon, Henry A., Jr. “Abiah’s legend lives on.” Robeson Remembers column. Robesonian Sunday, 22 January 2000: 1C, 3C.

TRAI001. “A trail to cheer.” Robesonian 27 July 2000: 4A.

FEAG001. Feagans, Brian. “6 counties study groundwater, take pulse of aquifer, wells.”  Wilmington Morning Star (NC) Tuesday, February 13, 2001: 1A, 4A. 723 words.

WITT019. Witten, Scott. “Park grows by 183 acres.” Robesonian 29 March 2002.

NPS001.  United States.  National Park Service.  “Lumber River, North Carolina.” http://www.nps.gov/rivers/wsr-lumber.html    Accessed 9 April 2002.

 



    For thorough research, please consult The Lumbee Indians: An Annotated Bibliography (Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Co., 1994) which lists 22 annotated items dealing with this topic.

Home Page URL: lumbeebibliography.net

 
Copyright © 2002, Glenn Ellen Starr Stilling. 
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