Ocracoke


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Description

First published in 1956, this popular classic tells the story of the small island of Ocracoke, certainly one of the loveliest pearls on the Outer Banks. Rich in history and legend, Ocracoke is a storyteller's dream. Carl Goerch had a sixty-year love affair with the island, and he does it justice in these entertaining and humorous stories. Goerch captures Ocracoke as it was more than sixty years ago, preserving it for the reader and vacationer of today. Many things have changed since his extended visits to the island. There are paved roads, police and a bank now, and most of the conveniences of modern life. Yet many things remain the same. The simple lifestyle, the spirit of the hardy islanders, the legends of pirates, storms and shipwrecks, the charm and beauty of the unspoiled beaches.

The late Carl Goerch was known as Mr. North Carolina. He excelled in several fields: as the long-term reading clerk for the state house of representatives, a popular broadcaster, newspaper columnist, book author, and a widely sought speaker full of good humor. Goerch also founded the popular magazine The State, still published today as Our State. He had visited all fifty states and fifty-two foreign countries, but if you asked him his favorite spot on earth, he no doubt would have said Ocracoke.



Author: Carl Goerch
Publisher: Blair
Published: 01/01/1956
Pages: 222
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.61lbs
Size: 8.22h x 5.25w x 0.66d
ISBN13: 9780895870315
ISBN10: 0895870312
BISAC Categories:
- Travel | United States | South | South Atlantic (DC, DE, FL, GA, MD,
- History | United States | State & Local | General

About the Author

The late Carl Goerch was known as Mr. North Carolina. He excelled in several fields: as the long-term reading clerk for the state house of representatives, a popular broadcaster, newspaper columnist, book author, and a widely sought speaker full of good humor. Goerch also founded the popular magazine The State, still published today as Our State. He had visited all fifty states and fifty-two foreign countries, but if you asked him his favorite spot on earth, he no doubt would have said Ocracoke.