Jane Little Botkin, Author

Wednesday, July 31, 2019

3-7-77, On the Anniversary of Frank Little's Murder

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  3-7-77.  The only clue attached to Frank Little’s corpse swinging on a hemp rope from a Milwaukee Railroad trestle in Butte, Montana, on A...
2 comments:
Thursday, July 11, 2019

The Bisbee Deportation: An Ugly History That Has Not Been Rewritten

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Tomorrow, July 12, is the 102nd anniversary of the infamous Bisbee Deportation.  This horrendous action of Americans taking illegal action...
Monday, June 24, 2019

Home from the Western Writers of America Conference

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Home from the Western Writers of America Conference.  For my friends and family who have no idea what this entails--most of you, let me ex...
Monday, April 22, 2019

In Remembrance of the Ludlow Massacre, 1914

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I found that Frank Little, subject of my first book Frank Little and the IWW:  The Blood That Stained an American Family , often spoke of L...
1 comment:
Sunday, February 10, 2019

Growing up with ASARCO, EL Paso, TX

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The University of Oklahoma Press recently released a new book that certainly caught my attention.  Copper Stain,  by Elaine Hampton and Cy...
1 comment:
Friday, February 1, 2019

Jane Street and the Rebel Maids: Sex, Syndicalism, and Denver's Capitol Hill

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Moving along quickly on my new book, that is what I can tell you.  Hence my absence from the blog!  This is what I can share with you: ...
Monday, November 5, 2018

Anniversary of the Everett Massacre

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Today is the anniversary of a horrific incident (which seems too mild of a word to use), where innocent men lost their lives at the hands of...
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About Me

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Jane Little Botkin
Award-winning author ​Jane (Janie) Little Botkin is a retired teacher turned historical investigator and author. After graduating from the University of Texas at El Paso with a BA in English, Jane taught high school students for thirty years and supervised fifteen volumes of the student-publication A History of Dripping Springs and Hays County (1993-2008), a valuable historical resource for Texas researchers. In 2008 the Texas State Legislature honored her career in education by formal resolution. In post-retirement, Jane has continued to write about and participate in local historic preservation, dividing her time between communities in the Texas Hill Country and New Mexico’s White Mountain Wilderness. Frank Little and the IWW : The Blood That Stained an American Family is her first nonfiction book, winner of two 2018 Spur Awards from Western Writers of America. The subject of the book is Botkin’s great-granduncle, a member of the Industrial Workers of the World, who was lynched for his words on August 1, 1917. Jane is currently working on her second book, Jane Street and the Rebel Maids: Sex, Syndicalism, and Denver's Capitol Hill.
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