A Heritage of the Heart Author:Georgia Kohart Elizabeth Hudson is a capable and competent young woman. Her career as a registered nurse for a busy surgical practice has trained her to handle just about any situation. Anything except the death of her husband. After three years of burying herself in her work, she realizes that it's time to quit running from the pain of loss and face her grief... more ». She returns to the Ohio countryside of her childhood for a brief vacation, knowing that making peace with the past will help her face the future. When driving up the lane to the "Old Brick," her family's ancestral home situated near the abandonded Miami and Erie Canal, Elizabeth has no idea just how far back in the past her journey is destined to take her. Suddenly thrust into the year 1850 - the heyday of the Ohio canal era - her skills are put to the test as she learns to survive on the rugged Ohio frontier. Along the way Elizabeth comes to know and love the people who are at once her past and her future. The Boisterous Ohio Canal Era Comes to Life in "A Heritage of the Heart" A horn blared and fine tenor voice sang out, ?Hey-ey-ey! Lo-o-ock!? Staggering at the impact, Elizabeth stared as the long rope attached to the mules that had just passed by dipped into the canal briefly, then rose again. Her eyes followed the rope to the amazing sight of a boat, a canal boat! She stared as it drew even and glided slowly by. The long, low-riding vessel was constructed of wood and painted white with red trim. Curtains fluttered from windows replete with green shutters. A man in soiled, old-fashioned clothing, stood atop the little house at the rear. He leaned slightly on a large pole that was parallel with the deck. It was attached to a rudder at the water line. The steersman politely touched his hat to Elizabeth as the craft passed so closely she could have touched it with an outstretched hand. As the Iron Horse stampeded across the untamed reaches of a brash young America, another era faded away as quickly as it had bloomed: the age of the Ohio canals. Ohio author, Georgia Kohart, breathes life into those almost forgotten days in her newly released title, A Heritage of the Heart. Desperate for employment, Irish and German immigrants migrated toward the Great Black Swamp, where they put in a 12-hour day for 30 cents and a tot of bad whiskey to ward off disease. The project, dubbed the ?Irish Graveyard,? provided more than a mode of transportation and a means to ship products from the rich swamps of Ohio back east. It became a way of life. The rich history of the Miami and Erie Canal into woven into a young woman?s journey through love, loss and self-discovery in this time travel tale. The title contains many actual events and settings from canal history.« less