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Articles 1 - 12 of 12
Full-Text Articles in History
Social Encyclicals And The Worker: The Evolution Of Catholic Labor Schools In Pennsylvania, Paul Lubienecki, Phd
Social Encyclicals And The Worker: The Evolution Of Catholic Labor Schools In Pennsylvania, Paul Lubienecki, Phd
Journal of Catholic Education
Many often identified the Catholic Church with the cause of labor and worker’s rights in the United States. However that was not the common situation encountered by laborers throughout most of the nineteenth century. The proclamation of the social encyclicals: Pope Leo XIII’s Rerum Novarum (1891) and Pope Pius XI’s Quadragesimo Anno (1931) elevated the status of the worker, endorsed worker associations and placed the Catholic Church as an advocate of worker’s rights. But for the worker to clearly understand this change as well as his rights and duties education was vital. For workers in Pennsylvania, especially in Pittsburgh and …
From Bornholm To Jamestown: C. C. Beck And The Settlement Of Danish Immigrants In Chautauqua County, New York And Warren County, Pennsylvania, John Everett Jones
From Bornholm To Jamestown: C. C. Beck And The Settlement Of Danish Immigrants In Chautauqua County, New York And Warren County, Pennsylvania, John Everett Jones
The Bridge
One of the earliest Danish immigrant settlements in North America was a community in western New York and northwestern Pennsylvania called Jamestown. Marcus P. Jacobsen has been recognized as the first person from Bornholm to settle in the Jamestown area1 in 1855 or 1856, and early on, members of this community came almost exclusively from Bornholm. However, histories have not recognized the importance of Charles C. Beck in the origin of this community. Emigration from Bornholm has been written about by Henning Bender2 this article adds to that research by situating Beck within the larger community of Danish immigrants who …
Recovering Thirty-Five Years Of A Factory Worker's Life, Kristie Zachar
Recovering Thirty-Five Years Of A Factory Worker's Life, Kristie Zachar
Student Projects from the Archives
The Westinghouse Electric Corporation's plant in Sharon, Pennsylvania operated from the 1920s till the 1980s and saw a number of significant events during that period. This article uses a belt buckle that was given to one company employee as a 35-year service award, and it explores the historical significance of the object by focusing on the major events its owner was involved in during those 35 years. It looks closer into the life of one Westinghouse employee while also exploring significant events that influenced the company itself as well as the small town of Sharon, Pennsylvania.
Righteousness, Reservation, Remembrance: Freedom-Loving Whites, Freedom-Seeking Blacks, And The Societies They Formed In Adams County, Brandon Roos
The Gettysburg Historical Journal
On the border between slave society and free society a collection of ideologies mixed. The residents of Adams County, even before its inception on January 22, 1800, lived in a state of division that swirled and crashed against the omnipresent slavery conundrum. The "New World Renaissance" swept through Adams County in the 1830s bringing schools, public works, businesses, and most culturally significant, new ideas. These ideas would prove to be the fount from which flowed the waters of reform. As the first settlers had made good use of the physical creeks and streams that dotted their pastoral landscape, so too …
Standing In Solidarity
St. Norbert Times
- News
- Standing in Solidarity
- Heid E. Erdrich Visits St. Norbert College
- Shelby Rodeffer “Paints Out” Towards the Reality of Social Media
- “God’s Got This”: The Story of the Decleenes
- Building Hope for Homelessness Week
- Hour of Power Honors Later Swimmer
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- The Holiday Spirit
- A College Christmas List
- Politics Today
- Not Sorry
- Thankful for the Athem
- Features
- Political Diversity in WI Schools
- The Season of Giving and Emptying Wallets
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- Junk Drawer: Holiday Traditions
- Sudoku
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- 2018 in Music… so far
- Review: “Devils Unto Dust” by Emma Berquist
- Mother Knows Best
- The Wild Kingdom of Black Friday Shopping
- Review Corner …
Snc Day: A September Tradition
Snc Day: A September Tradition
St. Norbert Times
- News
- SNC Day: A September Tradition
- Economic Study’s Promising Results for Allouez
- The CVC Goes Green
- Religion Meets Art: The St. John’s Bible
- SNC Moves Up in National Ranks
- Opinion
- The Importance of Arguments
- What the Future Might Hold
- Living Simply: A Reflection
- Just Do It
- Features
- Ruth’s Marketplace Remodeled
- SNC Annual Involvement Fair
- Entertainment
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- Sudoku
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- Where is Hip-Hop Going?
- Winners and Loser of Summer 2018
- Music Opinion
- Junk Drawer: Reboots We Want to See
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- Men’s Soccer Defeats Lakeland, 14-0
- “QB: 1 Beyond the Lights” Review
- Diving Into New Tradition
- Friday Wrap Up: Volleyball, XC
Making An Impression: Butter Prints, The Butter Market, And Rural Women In Nineteenth-Century Southeastern Pennsylvania, Jennifer L. Putnam
Making An Impression: Butter Prints, The Butter Market, And Rural Women In Nineteenth-Century Southeastern Pennsylvania, Jennifer L. Putnam
Madison Historical Review
Pre-industrial butter-making was an arduous process, involving milking, churning, proper storage, printing, and, sometimes, transport to market. The 19th-century economy in Philadelphia was forever changed by the practice of rural women selling their surplus butter as a response to the rise of consumerism. Butter-making provided rural women with the means to earn their own income, providing economic agency and increasing their independence by allowing them to work outside of the home. Butter prints emerged as a way to brand one’s butter with a signature trademark. A print’s size and shape, the materials and methods used in its construction, and the …
Gettysburg Historical Journal 2016
Gettysburg Historical Journal 2016
The Gettysburg Historical Journal
No abstract provided.
"Where We May Oftener Converse Together": Translation Of Written And Spoken Communication In Colonial Pennsylvania, Jenna E. Fleming
"Where We May Oftener Converse Together": Translation Of Written And Spoken Communication In Colonial Pennsylvania, Jenna E. Fleming
The Gettysburg Historical Journal
In this paper I examine the differences between colonists’ and Indians’ perceptions and use of language in early Pennsylvania. Through consideration of translation challenges in both spoken and written contexts, I conclude that while residents of the region created systems for coping with linguistic issues, basic disparities between native and colonial forms of communication persisted in complicating diplomatic relations. The title of the paper is taken from the August 26, 1758 entry in The Journal of Christian Frederick Post and is part of the Pennsylvanian government’s proposal for closer relations with Indians.
The Influence Of The Pennsylvania Mainline Of Public Works, Joseph A. Strausbaugh
The Influence Of The Pennsylvania Mainline Of Public Works, Joseph A. Strausbaugh
The Gettysburg Historical Journal
The Pennsylvania Mainline of Public Works, authorized and begun by Governor John Andrew Schulze in 1826, was the main transportation artery across Pennsylvania from the beginning of its operations in 1828 until the Pennsylvania Railroad purchased it in 1857. Though it was only in service for about thirty years, the Mainline was instrumental in shaping and affecting individuals, both passengers and employees of the canal; as well as Pennsylvania towns such as Saltsburg, Alexandria, Pittsburgh, and Philadelphia. This in turn affected national commerce.
Review: Tritt Family History. Volume I: Ancestry, Life And Times Of Brothers Hans, Peter, And Christian Tritt, Immigrants To Pennsylvania In 1739, And Their Children, Raymond S. Martin, Darvin L. Martin
Review: Tritt Family History. Volume I: Ancestry, Life And Times Of Brothers Hans, Peter, And Christian Tritt, Immigrants To Pennsylvania In 1739, And Their Children, Raymond S. Martin, Darvin L. Martin
Swiss American Historical Society Review
Although its contents are not directly relevant to family historians of Mennonites in Lancaster County , Pennsylvania, this top-quality history demonstrates how to organize, research, and present the story of a Pennsylvania German family with Swiss roots.
The “Plumed Knight” At Home: An Intimate Sketch Of James G. Blaine, H. Draper Hunt
The “Plumed Knight” At Home: An Intimate Sketch Of James G. Blaine, H. Draper Hunt
Maine History
This article is a detailed overview of the personal and political lives of Maine's James G. Blaine.