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- <p>Keeney, C. Frank (Charles Franklin).</p> <p>United Mine Workers of America - History.</p> <p>Labor unions - West Virginia.</p> <p>Coal miners - Labor Unions - West Virginia - History.</p> <p>Labor disputes - West Virginia - History.</p> (1)
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Articles 1 - 6 of 6
Full-Text Articles in Cultural History
Naccs 27th Annual Conference, National Association For Chicana And Chicano Studies
Naccs 27th Annual Conference, National Association For Chicana And Chicano Studies
NACCS Conference Programs
Sabiduría, Lucha, y Liberación: Youth, Community & Culture en el Nuevo Sol
March 22-25, 2000
Downtown Hilton
Millî Mücâdele’Nin Başlangıcında Konya Ve Atatürk’Ün Konya’Ya İlk Gelişleri, Yaşar Semiz
Millî Mücâdele’Nin Başlangıcında Konya Ve Atatürk’Ün Konya’Ya İlk Gelişleri, Yaşar Semiz
Yaşar Semiz
No abstract provided.
Millî Mücâdele Ve Mehmet Âkif, Yaşar Semiz
A Union Man: The Life Of C. Frank Keeney, Charles Belmont Keeney Iii
A Union Man: The Life Of C. Frank Keeney, Charles Belmont Keeney Iii
Theses, Dissertations and Capstones
The problem with West Virginia is that it is not controlled by West Virginians. For over a century coal operators, who do not make this state their home but rather the source of their income, have controlled the destiny of West Virginia and its people. The native mountaineers, unaware of the wealth beneath their feet, were either scattered throughout the state or became coal miners themselves. Since that time all West Virginians, not merely coal miners or former land owners, have been subjected to the will of out of state companies because they not only control the mines and the …
Come-Outers And Community Men: Abraham Lincoln And The Idea Of Community In Nineteenth-Century America, Allen C. Guelzo
Come-Outers And Community Men: Abraham Lincoln And The Idea Of Community In Nineteenth-Century America, Allen C. Guelzo
Civil War Era Studies Faculty Publications
The most eloquent and moving words Abraham Lincoln ever uttered about any community were those "few and simple words" he spoke on the rear platform of the railroad car that lay waiting on the morning of February 11, 1861, to take him to Washington, to the presidency, and ultimately to his death. As his "own breast heaved with emotion" so that "he could scarcely command his feelings sufficiently to commence" (in the description of James C. Conkling), Lincoln declared that "No one, not in my situation, can appreciate my feeling of sadness at this parting." To leave Springfield was to …
Osmanlı Devleti'nde Üniversite Darülfünûn, Yaşar Semiz
Osmanlı Devleti'nde Üniversite Darülfünûn, Yaşar Semiz
Yaşar Semiz
No abstract provided.