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  1. Lee Pickett was born in Big Rapids, Michigan where he attended public school and was employed as a bookkeeper. In 1898, he came to Washington with his grandfather, stopped briefly in Snohomish Co. and proceeded to Nome, Alaska, where they spent one season.

  2. Media in category "Images from the Lee Pickett Photographs of Washington State Collection to check" The following 159 files are in this category, out of 159 total. A Guthrie and Co bosses at Mill Creek shaft, ca 1926 (PICKETT 482).jpg 768 × 607; 106 KB

  3. Dewitt County. Acreage: 347.26. Price: 8,950,000.00. Lee, Lee & Puckitt is honored to present one of the most elegant, most beautiful game ranches in all of Texas! The Austin Trophy Whitetail Ranch is first in its class! Acres: 347.26. Taxes: Reported to be in AG-USE status with total taxes being approximately $7,500.00 for the year 2022.

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  6. Oct 2, 2021 · Michigan-born Lee Pickett (1882-1959) moved in 1910 to the Cascade Mountains town of Index in Snohomish County, Washington. He photographed the construction of some of the first passable roads in the county, and during the 1920s he worked for the Great Northern Railway Company, documenting improvements in the line.

  7. Some saw Pickett weeping over the loss of half of his division. Pickett’s after-battle report was reportedly extremely bitter, and General Lee forced Pickett to destroy it. Cavalry Captain John Singleton Mosby explained that after the war, Pickett still blamed Lee for the devastating losses and held bitter resentment for the old general ...

  8. Aug 1, 2006 · Lee said little at the time or afterward to justify his decision to launch what has become known as Pickett’s Charge, so analysis must be inferential and inconclusive. Our aim is to explain Lee’s fateful decision not with new facts but with new analytical methods to illuminate decisionmaking in combat.

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