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Traditions and Customs of Lancashire Popular Radicalism in Late Nineteenth-Century Industrial America
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 December 2008
Extract
During a decade of constant turmoil in the 1870s, immigrant textile workers from Lancashire, England seized control of labor politics in the southern New England region of the United States. They were men and women who had immigrated in successive waves before and after the American Civil War to the United States, specifically to the textile cities of Fall River and New Bedford, Massachusetts and to the mill villages north of Providence, Rhode Island.
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- Tradition and the Working Class
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- Copyright © International Labor and Working-Class History, Inc. 1992
References
Notes
Thanks to colloquium participants Helmut Gruber, Bella Bianco Feldman, Joe Trotter, Bruce Levine. and Bruno Ramirez for their suggestions and support. This essay is part of Constant Turmoil: The Politics of Industrial Life in Late Nineteenth-Century New England(Amherst, forthcoming).
1. For recent work on immigration, see Yans-McLaughlin, Virginia, ed., Immigration Reconsidered: History, Sociology, and Politics (Oxford, 1990);Google Scholar and Hoerder, Dirk, ed., “Struggle a Hard Battle”: Essays on Working-Class Immigrants (DeKalb, 1986)Google Scholar.
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