Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Discipline
- Keyword
-
- Connecticut (3)
- Irish (3)
- American Civil War (1)
- Anti-lynching movement (1)
- Book review (1)
-
- Carpet industry (1)
- Civil War (1)
- Colleges (1)
- Connecticut Irish-American Historical Society (1)
- Danbury (1)
- Ekphrasis (1)
- Enfield (1)
- Essex (1)
- Field trip (1)
- Harpers Ferry National Historical Park (1)
- Hartford Courant (1)
- History (1)
- History majors (1)
- Ida B. Wells (1)
- Immigrants (1)
- Index (1)
- Irish factory workers (1)
- John Brown (1)
- Lynch law (1)
- Lynching (1)
- Maritime (1)
- Memphis (1)
- New Haven (1)
- New London (1)
- Norwalk (1)
Articles 1 - 8 of 8
Full-Text Articles in History
Put Your Feet On The Ground Of History, Julie Mujic
Put Your Feet On The Ground Of History, Julie Mujic
History Faculty Publications
History majors at Sacred Heart University personified the quest for active and engaged learning with their eagerness to “put their feet on the ground of history.”
Cohen: Reconstructing The Campus: Higher Education And The American Civil War (Book Review), Julie Mujic
Cohen: Reconstructing The Campus: Higher Education And The American Civil War (Book Review), Julie Mujic
History Faculty Publications
Book review by Julie Mujic.
Cohen, Michael David. Reconstructing the Campus: Higher Education and the American Civil War. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 2012. ISBN: 9780813933177
Shaping Presence: Ida B. Wells’ 1892 Testimony Of The ‘Untold Story’ At New York’S Lyric Hall, Anita August
Shaping Presence: Ida B. Wells’ 1892 Testimony Of The ‘Untold Story’ At New York’S Lyric Hall, Anita August
English Faculty Publications
Ida B. Wells stood before a crowd of the social hierarchy of black women from Boston, Brooklyn, New York City, and Philadelphia at New York’s Lyric Hall on October 5, 1892.
Wells’ 1892 testimonial, Southern Horrors: Lynch Law in All its Phases, is the founding rhetorical text in the anti-lynching movement that called for a moral, religious, and legal referendum on lynching in America. By forsaking all of the commonplace rationale for lynching and the Southern social comfort that came with it, Wells reframed the simplistic characterizations of lynching with new questions to demonstrate its structural features. With the …
The Shanachie, Volume 26, Number 1, Connecticut Irish-American Historical Society
The Shanachie, Volume 26, Number 1, Connecticut Irish-American Historical Society
The Shanachie (CTIAHS)
Contents: "The legacy of two Irish tenors to Connecticut, John McCormack and Peter Dolan."
The Shanachie, Major Topic Index, 1989-2014, Connecticut Irish-American Historical Society
The Shanachie, Major Topic Index, 1989-2014, Connecticut Irish-American Historical Society
The Shanachie (CTIAHS)
Listing of major topics in each issue of The Shanachie from 1989-2014 (v.26 n.2)
The Shanachie, Volume 26, Number 3, Connecticut Irish-American Historical Society
The Shanachie, Volume 26, Number 3, Connecticut Irish-American Historical Society
The Shanachie (CTIAHS)
Contents: Museum in the Streets program planned for New Haven (Ethnic Heritage Center Project) -- Irish immigrants’ stories preserved for posterity (Sacred Heart University-CIAHS collaboration) -- An Irish link to the Hartford Courant’s 250th birthday ... but shame on the Courant for the job it did on the Irish
The Shanachie, Volume 26, Number 2, Connecticut Irish-American Historical Society
The Shanachie, Volume 26, Number 2, Connecticut Irish-American Historical Society
The Shanachie (CTIAHS)
Contents: You can blame an Irishman from Limerick for all the uproar on the Connecticut shoreline in 1814 -- Folksy paper portrayed Waterbury’s Irish in the 1890s: Sketches and profiles are unusual, but valuable, historical records.
The Shanachie, Volume 26, Number 4, Connecticut Irish-American Historical Society
The Shanachie, Volume 26, Number 4, Connecticut Irish-American Historical Society
The Shanachie (CTIAHS)
For more than 300 years, the most compelling reason that caused Irish people of all origins and religions to come in large numbers to the American colonies and the United States was economic opportunity. More simply: jobs. While the Irish are usually labeled as canal builders and domestic servants, a more accurate reading is that they were Jacks and Jills of all trades. In a young nation that was expanding geographically and economically, there was a constant need for workers. The Irish were able and willing. This issue of The Shanachie demonstrates the kind of fascinating information that is available …