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MEDIA RELEASE

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

AUTHOR OF “GARFIELD’S TRAIN” TO SPEAK AT WILLIAMSBURG LIBRARY


WILLIAMSBURG, VA – Author Feather Schwartz Foster will be the guest at a lecture and book signing about “Garfield’s Train” at 7:00 PM, Thursday, April 15, 2010.  The program is sponsored by the Williamsburg Library, Williamsburg, VA. 

It has been more than 125 years since the death of little-known President James Garfield, who died in Long Branch, NJ.  He was assassinated in 1881, only three months after his inauguration.  Foster’s book, “Garfield’s Train,” offers a glimpse of the Gilded Age of the 1880s in Long Branch, New Jersey, when that beautiful shore area was considered the “gilded strand.”  The rich and famous of that time summered in Long Branch in sprawling 30-room “cottages.”  “The fictional Dunbar family interacts with such characters as General Grant, Roscoe Conkling, James G. Blaine, and, of course, the Garfield family in the early 1880s,” says Foster, “in order to make the characters, the times, and the episodes leading to the death of President Garfield come to life.”

James A. Garfield was only president for six months – three of which were spent dying.  To finally escape the heat of the Washington summer and offer the dying man some respite, he was brought to Long Branch for his last days.  In a burst of patriotism and community spirit, a ¾ mile railroad spur was built overnight for the President to be brought from the train station right to the door of a cottage-by-the-sea.

According to the author, “This was arguably Long Branch’s proudest hours, and for some reason, it has become a mere footnote to history.  The actual historical records only indicate that it happened – not how it happened.  In ‘Garfield’s Train’, I tried to draw the picture in my mind of the entire posh resort and the way the 3,000 residents turned out to support the railroad workers in their labor of love and patriotism.” 

Feather Schwartz Foster, a New Jersey native who now lives in Williamsburg, VA, has also written “LADIES: A Conjecture of Personalities” about the First Ladies between Martha Washington and Mamie Eisenhower, and “T: An Auto-Biography” – a children’s book about a Model-T Ford.  A new non-fiction about the “old” First Ladies will be published in early 2011.  Foster has made more than 200 appearances in the New Jersey area talking about the “old” First Ladies and the Garfield Era.  She also lectures via the Christopher Wren Society in Williamsburg, VA.

Author Feather Schwartz Foster has been an “amateur” presidential historian for three decades.  Following a long career in advertising and having written a score of children’s musical shows, she has decided to draw on her thousand-volume personal presidential library and her love of history by penning “LADIES: A Conjecture of Personalities” and “Garfield’s Train”. 

“Garfield’s Train” is available at most online booksellers or through the author’s webpage at www.featherfoster.com.