Vendors & Historical Sutlers Wanted for Seminole War Event 2019

ARTISANS ARTISTS CRAFTSMEN

2019 Battle of Okeechobee

Feb. 23-24, 2019

Okeechobee Battlefield Historic State Park

3500 SE 38th Ave

Okeechobee, FL  34974 

Battle of Okeechobee Weekend

Commemorating the 1837 Battle of Okeechobee

February 23rd and February 24th, 2019Friday February 22, 2019 — 4th Grade Education Day

Open 10:00 am – 4:00 pm

An invitation for Demonstrations and Displays1800 Time Period Encouraged

Name ________________________________________ Tax number __________________ Address _____________________________________________________________________

_____________________________________________________________________ Telephone _____________________________Email_________________________________ Items selling or displaying______________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________ What size area do you need? ____________________________________________________

Selling Vendors: $26.75

Make Checks Payable to: Kissimmee Prairie Preserve State Park 33104 NW 192nd Ave.

Okeechobee, FL 34972
If you have additional questions or concerns please contact Natalie Carlson at the above

office number or email her at natalie.carlson@dep.state.fl.us

OKEECHOBEE BATTLEFIELD HISTORIC STATE PARK 3500 S.E. 38th Ave. Okeechobee, FL 34974
(GPS 27.211601-80.78930) www.OkeechobeeBattlefield.com

Display only: No fee

Office: 863-462-5360 Fax: 863-462-5276

A Second Look at The Lords of Discipline by Pat Conroy

The recent Pulpwood Girlfriend’s Weekend in Jefferson Texas was a fundraiser for Contory’s literacy efforts. This event revived my interest in Conroy’s writing, so I decided to read again his Lord’s of Discipline.

Why? Perhaps because I once lived in Charleston (James Island actually) and loved the city of Charleston and the whole area. I’ve often said it was my favorite city in the whole world. The history, culture, geography and legends have always amazed and intrigued me. While living there, I befriended some Citadel cadets and was able to visit the Citadel a few times. As I reflected on my friends, I wondered how that elite military college affected them. I decided to read the novel again and collect some thoughts on my reading. I purposely decided to not read any reviews; I just wanted to have a reader’s response to the novel.

Because of Conroy’s precise and sensory description of Charleston, I was taken back over twenty years to the days when I walked the streets of that city, strolling through the markets, investigating the stores, losing all sense of time in the museums. It was a city I could never get enough of and never fail to be surprised by. As Conroy says, it is “one of thosae cities that never lets go.”

The themes I discovered in the novel on friendship, the cruelty of men (and women), the power and pain of first love, the changing nature of memory, and the abuse of power were moving and sometimes disturbing. The old ragged paperback I read is now marked and underlined and Conroy’s vocabulary is an education in itself. I learned so much more than I intended, and that to me is a sign of a powerful book.

Some of the unforgettable lines on this read are: “I was young then, and my youth permitted me to believe I could change the world if only I could devise a cnning enough strategy” (211).

“Beautiful cities have a treacherous nature” (241).

“Great teachers had great personalities and that the greatest teachers had outrageous personalities” (271).

“The objects you valued defined you” (336).

There were so many good sentences and well-turned phrases from this very Southern writer. HERE iis a video of Conroy briefly discussing The Lords of Discipline.