History / United States / State & Local / Middle Atlantic DC, DE, MD, NJ, NY, PA)

Total 63 results found.

Twentieth-Century Pittsburgh, Volume One

Twentieth-Century Pittsburgh, Volume One

Government, Business, and Environmental Change

Now back in print, this is a pioneering analysis of an elite driven, post-World War II urban renewal, that has become the classic model for all such redevelopment projects.

The Early Architecture Of Western Pennsylvania

The Early Architecture Of Western Pennsylvania

The new edition of this long unavailable classic features an extensive analytical introduction by the noted architectural historian Dell Upton. Containing 416 black-and-white photographs, 81 measured drawings and an extensive text, this volume presents a splendid array of the early dwellings, barns, and other outbuildings, churches, arsenals, banks, inns, commercial buildings, tollhouses, mills, and even tombstones of western Pennsylvania.

The Battle For Homestead, 1880-1892

The Battle For Homestead, 1880-1892

Politics, Culture, and Steel

In The Battle for Homestead, Paul Krause calls upon the methods and insights of labor history, intellectual history, anthropology, and the history of technology to situate the events of the lockout and their significance in the broad context of America’s Guilded Age. Utilizing extensive archival material, much of it heretofore unknown, he reconstructs the social, intellectual, and political climate of the burgeoning post-Civil War steel industry.

The Inside History of the Carnegie Steel Company

The Inside History of the Carnegie Steel Company

A Romance of Millions

This book created a sensation when it appeared in 1903 and remains a striking insider’s narrative of the American steel industry in the late nineteenth century. Bridge was a fisthand witness to the confrontations of Andrew Carnegie and Henry Clay Frick, the eventual sale of Carnegie Steel and the formation of U.S. Steel.

City At The Point

City At The Point

Essays on the Social History of Pittsburgh

An overview of scholarly research, both published and previously unpublished, on the history of a city that has often served as a case study for measuring social change. It synthesizes the literature and assesses how that knowledge relates to our broader understanding of the processes of urbanization and urbanism.

Steel Titan

Steel Titan

The Life of Charles M. Schwab

Drawing upon previously undiscovered resources, Steel Titan is the first biography ever written on the life of Charles M. Schwab, president of U.S. Steel and founder of Bethlehem Steel.

Thunder In the Mountains

Thunder In the Mountains

The West Virginia Mine War, 1920–21

The Classic, Lively Narrative of a Seminal Labor Dispute in Appalachian History

And the Wolf Finally Came

And the Wolf Finally Came

The Decline and Fall of the American Steel Industry

A veteran reporter on American labor, John P. Hoerr analyzes the spectacular and tragic collapse of the steel industry in the 1980s. And the Wolf Finally Came demonstrates how an obsolete and adversarial relationship between management and labor made it impossible for the industry to adapt to a rapidly changing global economy.

Dont Call Me Boss

Dont Call Me Boss

David L. Lawrence, Pittsburgh’s Renaissance Mayor

The first biography of David L. Lawrence, the best of the city bosses, who became mayor of Pittsburgh, modern municipal manager, governor of Pennsylvania, and a power in national politics.

The Ephrata Commune

The Ephrata Commune

An Early American Counterculture

Tells of the founding and subsequent history of Ephrata, a mystical religious community that flourished in eastern Pennsylvania in the mid-eighteenth century. Its leader, Conrad Beissel, a German Pietist who came to America in 1720 seeking spiritual peace and solitude. Settled in Lancaster County, his talents and charisma attracted other German settlers who shared his vision of a community built in the image of apostolic Christianity.

The Spencers of Amberson Avenue

The Spencers of Amberson Avenue

A Turn-of-the-Century Memoir

This memoir introduces the family of Charles Hart Spencer and his wife Mary Acheson: seven children born between 1884 and 1895. It also introduces a large Victorian house in Shadyside (a Pittsburgh neighborhood) and a middle-class way of life at the turn of the century and includes family photographs taken by Mr. Spencer, who was a talented amateur photographer.

The Homestead Strike of 1892

The Homestead Strike of 1892

A Complete Account of America’s Most Famous Labor Struggle

Pittsburgh

Pittsburgh

The Story of a City, 1780-1865

The standard history of Pittsburgh tells the city’s story from its violent days as an eighteenth-century outpost of empire to the onset of its great age of industrial expansion.

Council Fires On the Upper Ohio

Council Fires On the Upper Ohio

Council Fires on the Upper Ohio is a unique account of the Indian-white relations during the second half of the eighteenth century. Told from the point of view of the Indians, it details how the Indians maintained a precarious hold of Western Pennsylvania by playing one white faction off against another.

Whiskey Rebels

Whiskey Rebels

The Story of a Frontier Uprising

A succinct account of the Whiskey Rebellion of 1794 in Western Pennsylvania, recalling the economic and sociological factors that led to this historic uprising.

Total 63 results found.