United States -- Social conditions -- 1865-1918
Label
United States -- Social conditions -- 1865-1918
Name
United States
Focus
Sub focus
Actions
Incoming Resources
- Subject of19
- Why did African-American women join the Woman's Christian Temperance Union, 1880-1900?, by Thomas Dublin and Angela Scheuerer
- The age of acquiescence, the life and death of American resistance to organized wealth and power, Steve Fraser
- The new country, a social history of the American frontier, 1776-1890, Richard A. Bartlett
- A fierce discontent, the rise and fall of the Progressive movement in America, 1870-1920, Michael McGerr
- 1912, Wilson, Roosevelt, Taft & Debs-- the election that changed the country, James Chace
- A very different age, Americans of the progressive era, Steven J. Diner
- How did African-American women define their citizenship at the Chicago World's Fair in 1893?, by Kathryn Kish Sklar and Erin Shaughnessy
- The divorce colony, how women revolutionized marriage and found freedom on the American frontier, April White
- The Progressive movement, 1900-1915, edited and with an introduction by Richard Hofstadter
- The response to industrialism, 1885-1914
- Industrialization and the transformation of American life, a brief introduction, Jonathan Rees
- Crusader nation, the United States in peace and the Great War, 1898-1920, David Traxel
- The failed promise, Reconstruction, Frederick Douglass, and the impeachment of Andrew Johnson, Robert S. Levine
- America, 1908, the dawn of flight, the race to the Pole, the invention of the Model T, and the making of a modern nation, Jim Rasenberger
- How did gender and class shape the age of consent campaign within the social purity movement, 1886-1914?, by Melissa Doak, Rebecca Park and Eunice Lee
- American reformers, 1870-1920, progressives in word and deed, edited by Steven L. Piott
- Illiberal reformers, race, eugenics, and American economics in the Progressive era, Thomas C. Leonard
- How did the local branches of the American Association of University Women contribute to their communities, 1900-1940?, by Kathryn Kish Sklar and Jenelle Lynette Mullen
- The muckrakers;, the era in journalism that moved America to reform, the most significant magazine articles of 1902-1912,, edited and with notes by Arthur and Lila Weinberg
Outgoing Resources
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