Frances Levine is the former president and CEO of the Missouri Historical Society in St. Louis. She also served as the director of the New Mexico History Museum and as the interim executive director of the St. Louis Kaplan Feldman Holocaust Museum.
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What an engaging collection of fascinating stories, allowing us to meet several women and the men associated with them in their travels on the Santa Fe Trail. A lively account of the convergence of cultures, spotlighting the symbiotic and sometimes conflicted relationships that developed. You'll find it most entertaining, informative, and enjoyable!""-Dave Kendall, executive producer, Prairie Hollow Productions and The Road to Santa Fe""Steel rails put an end to the Santa Fe Trail more than one hundred and forty years ago, but in this important work, Fran Levine shows us that there's still much to learn about this fabled road and its legacy. Through the lives of the trail-traveling women she ably explores, we are given unique windows not only into a swirling era of US westward expansion, but the equally fascinating human experience.""-Mark Lee Gardner, author of The Earth Is All That Lasts: Crazy Horse, Sitting Bull, and the Last Stand of the Great Sioux Nation ""Fran Levine invites us to step into the Crossings. Who you find in the passages may surprise and challenge you, but they will also inspire you. These are no ordinary people-captives, companions, and catalysts-but they stand among those that history has forgotten, lives obscured in part by the male figures that loomed large in their lives, but also silenced by those creating the imprints from which history is recorded.""-Estevan Rael-GAlvez, executive director of Native Bound Unbound

