Marriages in Montpelier, Burlington and Berlin, Vt., 1789-1876

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Marriages in Montpelier, Burlington and Berlin, Vt., 1789-1876 Marriages in Montpelier, Burlington and Berlin, Vt. 1789-1876 The marriages listed in this publication were taken from Vermont Marriages, Vol. 1 (Boston: Research Publication Co., 1903), available at the Leahy Library of the Vermont Historical Society and other repositories. That publication lists marriages in chronological order, and is unindexed, making searching for an individual difficult. The marriages are presented in the original book in the following sequence: Marriages in Montpelier, Vt. Town Clerk’s Record, 1791-1852 – pages 9-38 Congregational Church Records, 1815-1852 – pages 41-45 Christ Episcopal Church Records, 1792-1851 – page 49 Marriages in Burlington, Vt. Town Clerk’s Record, 1789-1833 – pages 53-60 Unitarian Church Records, 1822-1830 – pages 63-64 Marriages in Berlin, Vt. Town Clerk’s Record, 1791-1876 – pages 67-92 The information that follows is arranged alphabetically, and includes both the bride and the groom. The page reference at the end of each entry can be compared to the list above to determine whether the marriage was recorded in the civil record or a church record. In cases where the bride’s given name is missing (i.e., initials only are given), I have inserted [Miss] to make it clear that the person is a female. A few of the marriage records included birth dates for the participants. That information is included herein under the name of each person. Robert M. Murphy Barre, Vt. 2009 -- Montpelier:42 Ella L. Anson m. W.W. Johnston of Worcester, Mass. 1 Jan 1873, m. Rosina House 4 Oct 1853, Berlin:85 Berlin:91 Charles John B. m. Maria E. Wait 20 Jun 1814, Burlington:53 m. Caroline Lamorie 14 Nov 1833, Burlington:60 m. Maria E. Wait of New London, Conn., published 6 Jun 1814, Burlington:53 A Levi P. Abbott m. Temperance Chandler of Berlin, Vt. 17 Jan 1849, John Montpelier:36 m. Lucy Ann Bennett 26 Oct 1824, Burlington:56 Lucy M. Sarah m. Presson R. Gale of Brookfield, Vt. 5 Apr 1835, m. Benjamin Pike 20 Jun 1839, Montpelier:28 Montpelier:24 Adams Samuel, Jr. Almira m. Lucy Enos 13 Jan 1811, Burlington:53 m. Pascal P. Brooks of Henniker, N.H. 6 Feb 1827, Ainsworth Marriages in Montpelier, Burlington and Berlin, Vt., 1789-1876 Cynthia m. Eliza Crosby 21 Nov 1827, Montpelier:19 m. John Howland 17 Sep 1803, Montpelier:11 Lovisa Elina m. Larned Coburn 5 Oct 1823, Montpelier:17 m. Fayette Tichout 14 Jan 1841, Montpelier:29 Lucy Caroline Fanny m. Samuel Hitchcock 26 May 1789, Burlington:53 m. Erasmus D. Cutler 19 Sep 1841, Montpelier:30 Polly Alden m. Elijah McKnight 25 Dec 1806, Montpelier:12 Asa m. Mark Nelson 6 Jul 1794, Montpelier:9 m. Avis Hammett Snow 29 Oct 1822, Montpelier:16 Rebecca Aldrich m. James McKnight 28 Jul 1811, Montpelier:13 Eliza Ruhannah m. Albert Annis of Manchester, N.H. 8 Sep 1846, m. Reuben Gray 21 Dec 1797, Montpelier:9 Berlin:82 Allice Jonathan W. Elisha m. Eliza Ann Woodbury 19 Apr 1833, Berlin:78 m. Mrs. Sarah Simons 31 Dec 1858, Berlin:87 Sarah J. Alling m. Alden Doten 10 Dec 1848, Berlin:83 Josiah Alexander m. Polly Gray 3 Jan 1808, Montpelier:12 Clara Alls m. Frank Kimmis 27 Mar 1873, Berlin:91 Ann Clark m. David Barton 5 Dec 1805, Montpelier:11 m. Mary E. Hale 14 Sep 1850, Berlin:84 Ames Louisa Caroline Sanger m. Valentine Clark 25 Dec 1842, Berlin:81 m. Thomas Mills 24 Jun 1829, Burlington:64 Mary Caroline Sawyer m. Jesse Cummings of East Montpelier, Vt. 25 Feb m. Thomas Mills 24 Jun 1829, Burlington:59 1851, Berlin:84 Rebecca Alger m. Joseph Hodgman 25 Dec 1808, Burlington:53 Emily A. Sally m. Casper Page of Greensborough, Vt. 14 Feb 1833, m. John B. Kelton of Calais, Vt. 5 Jul 1810, Montpelier:22 Montpelier:13 Nancy F. Andrews m. Walter B. Mills of Berlin, Vt. 5 Sep 1847, see also Andrus Montpelier:34 Aaron Alix m. Betsey Andrews 5 Mar 1840, Berlin:80 Albert Adelaide A. m. Fanny Crapo 12 Jul 1875, Berlin:92 m. George G. Cressey 21 Mar 1860, Berlin:87 Allen Asa Alpha m. Margaret Strong 1 Jan 1812, Berlin:70 m. Adalaide Nash 23 Feb 1837, Montpelier:26 m. Mrs. Dinah H. House 12 Jul 1858, Berlin:86 Amanda Asa G. m. Jonas Parker 11 Dec 1805, Berlin:68 m. [Miss] C.M. Gibson of Montpelier, Vt. 19 Sep Andrew 1875, Berlin:92 m. Eunice Minor 3 Jan 1806, Montpelier:11 Betsey Charles m. Aaron Andrews 5 Mar 1840, Berlin:80 m. Fidelia Bailey of Colchester, Vt. 3 Mar 1831 at Edmund E. Colchester, Burlington:59 m. Lucy Benjamin 14 Sep 1852, Berlin:85 Cyrus H. Eliza M. m. Myra Ann Johnston 8 Mar 1859, Berlin:87 m. Rial Bennett of Northfield, Vt. 15 Mar 1838, E. A. Berlin:79 m. Fanny A. Clark of Middlesex, Vt. 28 Aug 1839, Ella H. Montpelier:28 m. G.P. Rowell 5 Feb 1871, Berlin:90 George Harriet m. Lydia A. Wheelock of Berlin, Vt. 20 Jan 1842, m. Smith Stevens 2 Jun 1841, Montpelier:30 Montpelier:31 Ira Ira M. m. Abigail Black 25 Sep 1810, Berlin:70 2 Marriages in Montpelier, Burlington and Berlin, Vt., 1789-1876 Lovinia m. Eliza Aldrich 8 Sep 1846, Berlin:82 m. Holton Dillingham of Waterbury, Vt. 24 Sep 1828, Arbuckal Berlin:75 see also Arbuckle Mabel Ann m. Phineas Kellogg of Brookfield, Vt. 19 Dec 1827, m. Mr. Wrisley of Waterbury, Vt. 1 Nov 1826, Berlin:75 Montpelier:42 Marrilla B. Arbuckle m. Tiberius Morse of Duxbury, Vt. 22 Mar 1860, see also Arbuckal Berlin:87 Ann Martha m. Mr. Wrisley of Waterbury, Vt. 1 Nov 1826, m. Chester R. Austin 6 Jan 1857, Berlin:86 Berlin:75 Mary Belinda m. Asahel H. Nye 7 Jan 1811, Berlin:70 m. John S. Cummins of Ward, Mass. 2 Sep 1834, Milla Montpelier:23 b. 7 Jan 1799, Berlin:74 James m. Charles Royce of Washington, Vt. 9 Mar 1825, m. Zipporah Cutler 27 Oct 1808, Montpelier:12 Berlin:74 Sophronia S. Patty m. Albert D. Cummings 25 Dec 1862, Berlin:88 m. Ebenezer Bailey 9 Jun 1844, Berlin:81 Arms Sarah M. Austin m. Dan Thompson 30 Oct 1834, Montpelier:24 m. Sally Davis 25 Dec 1816, Montpelier:14 Tamar M. Austin D. m. J.E. Hale 16 Aug 1874, Berlin:91 m. Fanny Dodge 19 Jan 1841, Montpelier:30 Thomas Lizzie m. Esther Beckwith 3 Jan 1804, Montpelier:11 m. Benj. F. Whitehill 24 Sep 1874, Berlin:91 Vianna Sarah m. John F. Huse 7 Mar 1863, Berlin:89 m. J.P. Miller of Randolph, Vt. 26 Jun 1828, William L. Montpelier:20 m. Harriet M. Stewart 31 Mar 1844, Berlin:81 Sarah E. Andrus m. Henry C. Dwight of Franklin, La. 14 Sep 1845, see also Andrews Montpelier:33 Amanda A. Arnold m. D.C.A. Richardson 10 Jun 1850, Berlin:84 Dan Calvin m. Caroline Fay 10 Mar 1825, Burlington:56 m. Nancy C. Haseltine 22 Jan 1837, Montpelier:26 Atherton David Charlotte m. Elizabeth L. House 13 Nov 1850, Berlin:84 m. Rev. Nathaniel L. Chase of Charleston, Vt. 5 May Diantha 1846, Montpelier:34 m. Thomas L. Brown 1 Jan 1840, Montpelier:29 Elihua, 2d Dulcina m. Reste Ram (or Rand) of Jericho, Vt. 17 Dec 1815, m. Oren Slayton of Calais, Vt. 18 Feb 1838, Burlington:54 Montpelier:27 Oziras Fanny m. Lydia Persons 17 Feb 1811, Montpelier:13 m. Josephus Slayton 15 Jan 1841, Montpelier:29 Atwood Lester John m. Sarah Slayton of Calais, Vt. 1 Jan 1842, m. Almira Kellogg 16 Sep 1838, Berlin:79 Montpelier:30 Aubery Angel Albert Stukeley m. Almira Blush 2 Feb 1823, Burlington:55 m. Harriet L. Tuthill 1 Jan 1823, Montpelier:16 Eleanor Angell m. Joshua Chamberlin 28 Dec 1824, Burlington:56 Minerva S. Austin m. Seth Austin of Randolph, Vt. 24 Mar 1843, Betsey Montpelier:32 m. Lorenzo Belknap of Randolph, Vt. 16 Sep 1847, Annis Berlin:83 Albert Chester R. 3 Marriages in Montpelier, Burlington and Berlin, Vt., 1789-1876 m. Martha Andrews 6 Jan 1857, Berlin:86 Nathaniel C. Edwin m. Mary Perrin 2 Apr 1846, Berlin:82 m. Harriet A. Stewart 27 Dec 1855, Berlin:86 Bagley John Daniel m. Sally McAllister __ ___ 1810, Berlin:69 m. Nancy Howard 23 Jan 1814, Burlington:55 Maria Bailey m. Paul C. Hyde of Andover, Ohio 6 Jun 1850, see also Bayley; Baylies Berlin:84 Adeline Seth m. John H. Kimball 26 Nov 1863, Berlin:89 m. Minerva S. Angell 24 Mar 1843, Montpelier:32 Almira Averill m. Enoch B. Flanders 4 Mar 1833, Berlin:78 Charles K. Anasina m. Emily Coit 11 Feb 1825, Burlington:56 m. Andrew C. Bailey 2 Mar 1843, Berlin:81 Avery Andrew C. Patience m. Anasina Bailey 2 Mar 1843, Berlin:81 m. Oliver Brown 9 Feb 1826, Berlin:74 Anette N. Sarah E. m. C.E. Lindsley of Munsville, N.Y. 19 Oct 1870, m. Andrew J. Moulton of Sharon, Vt. 19 Oct 1857, Berlin:90 Berlin:86 Azarell Ayer m. Moses Lamphear 26 Jul 1829, Burlington:59 see also Ayers; Ayres Cairo Jonathan m. William B. Caswell 10 Jan 1841, Montpelier:29 m. Betsey Woodbury 25 Dec 1793, Berlin:67 Caroline Mary m. Horatio Nye 30 Mar 1843, Berlin:81 m. William Woodbury of Boston, Mass. 15 Jan 1813, Ebenezer Berlin:70 m. Patty Andrews 9 Jun 1844, Berlin:81 Ayers Ebenezer, Jr. see also Ayer; Ayres b. 30 May 1796, Berlin:72 Alice M. m. Mary Jane Jackson 17 Oct 1859, Berlin:87 m.
Recommended publications
  • John Reed, Ten Days That Shook the World
    Review: John Reed, Ten Days That Shook the World Barney Doherty thing but a detailed account’ of the revolu- tion, amongst its pages are counters to the common criticism of the revolution as well as several important lessons for revolutionaries today. Immediately in Ten Days That Shook the World, Reed reveals how Russian society was in a flux. Ideas were being debated on street corners and in large halls, all of Russia, he writes, ‘was learning to read politics, eco- nomics, history because people wanted to know.’ The masses were not passive spec- tators of the political discussion but were energetic participants. Reed commented that by October the period of the February Revolution seemed conservative by comparison. Russian poli- John Reed, Ten Days That Shook the World tics ‘swung bodily to the Left’ as the masses grew in confidence and changed the param- eters of political discourse, ‘until the Cadets The centenary of the Russian Revolution were outlawed as ‘enemies of the people’, in 1917 is obviously significant for Marxists. Kerensky became a ‘counter-revolutionist’, This year will see attempts to misrepresent the ‘middle’ Socialist leaders... were too re- the revolution or questions its democratic actionary for their following’. (p. 36) nature or political necessity. Revolutionary socialists, therefore, must The revolution in October was part of a study the event themselves and understand wider process of human liberation, as people how it happened and what its significance were actively involved in conciously shap- was. A good place to start is with John ing their society. The levels of engagement Reed’s Ten Days That Shook the World.
    [Show full text]
  • The Salon of Mabel Dodge
    DIVISION OF THE HUMANITIES AND SOCIAL SCIENCES CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY PASADENA, CALIFORNIA 91125 THE SALON OF MABEL DODGE Robert A. Rosenstone To be published in Peter Quennell, ed., Salon (London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1980). HUMANITIES WORKING PAPER 24 January 1979 THE SALON OF ~WillEL DODGE Robert A. Rosenstone Mabel Dodge's salon ••• burst upon New York like a rocket. Margaret Sanger It was the only successful salon I have ever seen in America. Lincoln Steffens Many famous salons have been established by women of wit or beauty; Mabel's was the only one ever established by pure will power. And it was no second-rate salon; everybody in the ferment of ideas could be found there. Max Eastman 2 It is indeed the happy woman who has no history, for by happy we mean the loving and beloved, and by history we designate all those relatable occurences on earth caused by the human energies seeking other outlets than the biological one. • . That I have so many pages to write signifies, solely, that I was unlucky in love. Most of the pages are about what I did instead •. Mabel Dodge 1 Mabel Dodge was rich and attractive and more than a little lucky. For two years -- from 1912 to 1914 -- she played hostess to the most famous and no doubt the most interesting salon in American history. This success was no accident, but the result of a subtle interplay between her individual needs and ambitions and the historical moment. It was a very special period in the cultural life of the United States, one when expatriate Irish painter John Butler Yeats cocked an ear and heard "the fiddles • tuning as it were allover America.
    [Show full text]
  • Anarchy! an Anthology of Emma Goldman's Mother Earth
    U.S. $22.95 Political Science anarchy ! Anarchy! An Anthology of Emma Goldman’s MOTHER EARTH (1906–1918) is the first An A n t hol o g y collection of work drawn from the pages of the foremost anarchist journal published in America—provocative writings by Goldman, Margaret Sanger, Peter Kropotkin, Alexander Berkman, and dozens of other radical thinkers of the early twentieth cen- tury. For this expanded edition, editor Peter Glassgold contributes a new preface that offers historical grounding to many of today’s political movements, from liber- tarianism on the right to Occupy! actions on the left, as well as adding a substantial section, “The Trial and Conviction of Emma Goldman and Alexander Berkman,” which includes a transcription of their eloquent and moving self-defense prior to their imprisonment and deportation on trumped-up charges of wartime espionage. of E m m A g ol dm A n’s Mot h er ea rt h “An indispensable book . a judicious, lively, and enlightening work.” —Paul Avrich, author of Anarchist Voices “Peter Glassgold has done a great service to the activist spirit by returning to print Mother Earth’s often stirring, always illuminating essays.” —Alix Kates Shulman, author of Memoirs of an Ex-Prom Queen “It is wonderful to have this collection of pieces from the days when anarchism was an ism— and so heady a brew that the government had to resort to illegal repression to squelch it. What’s more, it is still a heady brew.” —Kirkpatrick Sale, author of The Dwellers in the Land “Glassgold opens with an excellent brief history of the publication.
    [Show full text]
  • Presenter Contact Information
    Presenter Contact Information Abad, Daniel, Michigan State University, [email protected] Abdul-Ra'uf, Bakhitah B., Radford University, [email protected] Abel, Meagan Nicole, Michigan State University, [email protected] Abel, Richard, Texas A&M University, [email protected] Abella, Anna Davidson, University of South Florida, [email protected] Abualnaja, Nader, U.S. Census, [email protected] Acquaviva, Brittany L., Sam Houston State University, [email protected] Acton, Daniel N., University of Florida, [email protected] Adams, Ian T., University of Utah, [email protected] Adkinson, Cary Dale, Texas Wesleyan University, [email protected] Adubato, Beth Ellen, Saint Peter's University, [email protected] Afifi, Tracie O., University of Manitoba, [email protected] Ajil, Ahmed, University of Lausanne, [email protected] Akbas, Halil, Troy University, [email protected] Akgul, Arif, Indiana State University, [email protected] Akhter, Morsheda, Texas Woman's University, [email protected] Akin, Shelleen N., University of North Carolina at Charlotte, [email protected] Akyuz, Kadir, University of Bridgeport, [email protected] Alahmad, Saad Mohammed S., University of New Haven, [email protected] Alaniz, Heather, Texas A&M International University, [email protected] Alarid, LeAnne, University of Texas, El Paso, [email protected] Alasti, Sanaz, Lamar University, [email protected] Albanese, Jay, Virginia Commonwealth University, [email protected] Alexander, Jim, Texas Woman's University, [email protected] Alexander, Kellie
    [Show full text]
  • The Life and Times of Emma Goldman: a Curriculum for Middle and High School Students
    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 356 998 SO 023 057 AUTHOR Falk, Candace; And Others TITLE The Life and Times of Emma Goldman: A Curriculum for Middle and High School Students. Primary Historical Documents on: Immigration, Freedom of Expression, Women's Rights, Anti-Militarism, Art and Literature of Social Change. INSTITUTION California Univ., Berkeley. Emma Goldman Papers Project.; Los Angeles Educational Partnership, CA.; New Directions Curriculum Developers, Berkeley, CA. REPORT NO ISBN-0-9635443-0-6 PUB DATE 92 NOTE 139p.; Materials reproduced from other sources will not reproduce well. AVAILABLE FROMEmma Goldman Papers Project, University of California, 2372 Ellsworth Street, Berkeley, CA 94720 ($13, plus $3 shipping). PCB TYPE Guides Classroom Use Teaching Guides (For Teacher) (052) EDRS PRICE MF01/PC06 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS *Females; Feminism; Freedom of Speech; Higher Education; High Schools; Hig ,School Students; *Humanities Instruction; Intermediate Grades; Junior High Schools; Labor; Middle Schools; Primary Sources; *Social Studies; *United States History; Units of Study IDENTIFIERS *Goldman (Emma); Middle School Students ABSTRACT The documents in this curriculum unit are drawn from the massive archive collected by the Emma Goldman Papers Project at the University of California (Berkeley). They are linked to the standard social studies and humanities curriculum themes of art and literature, First Amendment rights, labor, progressive politics, and Red Scare, the rise of industrialization, immigration, women's rights, World War I, and
    [Show full text]
  • The New Nuclear Weapons by John Laforge John Reed and the Russian
    The new nuclear weapons by john laforge john reed and The russian revoluTion by p. sainaTh The presidenT and The porn sTar by ruTh fowler mexico’s big elecTions by kenT paTerson The fbi aT work by paul krassner TELLS THE FACTS AND NAMES THE NAMES · VOLUME 25 NUMBER 2 2018 AND NAMES THE · VOLUME THE FACTS TELLS editorial: 1- year digital edition (PDF) $25 [email protected] 1- year institutions/supporters $100 www.counterpunch.org business: [email protected] 1- year print/digital for student/low CounterPunch Magazine, Volume 25, subscriptions and merchandise: income $40 (ISSN 1086-2323) is a journal of progres- [email protected] 1-year digital for student/low income $20 sive politics, investigative reporting, civil All subscription orders must be prepaid— liberties, art, and culture published by The Submissions we do not invoice for orders. Renew by Institute for the Advancment of Journalis- CounterPunch accepts a small number of telephone, mail, or on our website. For tic Clarity, Petrolia, California, 95558.Visit submissions from accomplished authors mailed orders please include name, ad- counterpunch.org to read dozens of new and newer writers. Please send your pitch dress and email address with payment, or articles daily, purchase subscriptions, or- to [email protected]. Due call 1 (800) 840-3683 or 1 (707) 629-3683. der books and access 18 years of archives. to the large volume of submissions we re- Add $25.00 per year for subscriptions Periodicals postage pending ceive we are able to respond to only those mailed to Canada and $45 per year for all at Eureka, California.
    [Show full text]
  • One Hundred Years Since October
    1 2 3 4 One Hundred Years since October 5 6 7 Suzi Weissman 8 9 10 11 The Russian Revolution of October 1917 opened up a new historical epoch and was 12 greeted with enthusiasm by workers around the world. Never before had workers 13 come close to winning power, though many participated in political life in the social 14 democratic parties of Western Europe. Now, suddenly, in Russia, revolution was an 15 actuality, not simply a hope or a threat, as a huge country broke from international 16 capitalism. It is almost impossible to imagine today the intoxicating power of that 17 moment: Victor Serge described it as one where “life is beginning anew, where con- 18 scious will, intelligence, and an inexorable love of mankind are in action.”1 19 20 Russian Revolution as Workers’ Democracy / Workers’ Power 21 Workers around the world greeted the Russian Revolution with jubilation because it 22 represented their broadest aspirations, a new “democracy of free workers, such as had 23 never before been seen.”2 In Russia’s frontline cities of Petrograd and Moscow, Tash- 24 kent and Kazan, and in the provinces from Tula to Tambov, Ryazan to Kaluga, in 25 the networks of railroads across the country, hundreds of thousands of workers, peas- 26 ants, and soldiers took their fate into their own hands. They organized collectively 27 at the level of industry, agriculture, and garrisons, forming committees and councils, 28 developing their politics, their leaderships, and their power to fight their employers 29 and the state, all at the same time.
    [Show full text]
  • John Reed and Revolution
    1 JOHN REED AND REVOLUTION oday, Americans face intense terrorist threats and thus hard choices: Which rights and freedoms can we, must we, curtail in Torder to be safer in our streets and homes? Can our government tap wires without a court order? Detain suspected enemies without spe- cifi c charges? Subject members of one religious group to additional scru- tiny at our borders? These are precisely the sorts of decisions that J. Edgar Hoover and his successors faced in dealing with Communism for much of the twentieth century, so there should be a great deal we could learn from reading about that time. But today, Communism and anti- Communism are just terms that appear on tests, like the Whig, Greenback, or Know- Nothing parties. Flattened out into a chronology of unfamiliar names and forgettable dates, the great dramas of the twentieth century are useless to us. We can benefi t from the story of Communism and anti- Communism only if we experience it as the people who lived it did — with passion. Once you step MASTERDECEIT_BGI_US.indd 3 10/14/11 1:29 PM inside the mind of that recent past, you will have a new tool for facing the challenges of our time. THE TRUTH OF AMERICAN HISTORY There are two ways to tell the story of America. Here’s one: Yearning to be free, courageous individuals set out from England to the New World. From the Mayfl ower on, the spirit of this land has been that of liberty and personal effort. No longer needing to bow to kings or obey priests, Americans set out to improve themselves and to show the world what democracy, industry, and individual effort could achieve.
    [Show full text]
  • The Nominating Convention and Youth
    Page Eight THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, MAY 19, 1928 THE DAILY WORKER “LOVE AND AFFECTION FOR THE GOVERNOR” By Fred Ellis Plan Combine Published by the NATIONAL DAILY WORKER PUBLISHING ASS’N, Inc. Daily, Except Sunday Os Electrical ft First Street, New York, N. Y. Phone, Orchard 1680 A Cable Address: "Dalwork" SUBSCRIPTION RATES Bosses in U. S.i •By Mail (in New York only): By Mail (outside of New York): |$.OC per year $4.50 six months $6.50 per year $3.50 six months The greatest electric power and ga»| three months. $2.00 throe months. combine the world has ever known is L announced by through the #52.50 Address and mall out checks to Wall Street National City Bank. The Consolidated THE DAILY 33 First Street, New N. Y. WORKER. Yorfr, Gas Company and the Brooklyn Edi- i Editor • ROBERT MINOR son Company wjll form a new trust, jrl&pr Assistant Editor WM. F. DUNNE with $800,000,000 in assets. Commit- tees of both groups have been nego- terea as second-class mall at the post-office at New York, N. Y.. under tiating for and representatives “ this the act March 3. 1579. of of the two corporations met jointly yes-’ terday afternoon for final action, j This combination of the electric and| gas companies of New York City, i Long Island and Westchester means) a billion dollar water-tight trust able! to fleece the workingclass even more j than they have in the past. The gi-1 HONOR gantic trust will be second in size I only to the American Telephone andj Telegraph Company, controlled by the THE MEMORY OF Morgan interests.
    [Show full text]
  • Upton Sinclair: Socialist Prophet Without Honour
    UPTON SINCLAIR: SOCIALIST PROPHET WITHOUT HONOUR. A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts in American Studies in the University of Canterbury by Gerard R. Davidson University of Canterbury 1985 Upton Sinclair: Socialist prophet without honour: A study of his changing relationship with the Socialist Party 1906-1934. CONTENTS Page ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS INTRODUCTION i - iii CHAPTER ONE: Dime Novels and Social Passions 1 - 14 CHAPTER TWO: The Last of the Muckrake Men 15 - 37 CHAPTER THREE: Helicon Hall: Flawed Utopia 38 - 54 CHAPTER FOUR: Prolific Writer's Cramp versus literary fecundity 55 - 67 CHAPTER FIVE: The Ludlow Massacre Campaign 68 - 85 CHAPTER SIX: Jimmie Higgens goes to War 86 - 111 CHAPTER SEVEN: Upton Sinclair and the Jazz Age: A Quixote in a Fliver 112 - 134 CHAPTER EIGHT: I, Governor of California and How I Ended Poverty 135 - 160 APPENDICES: 161 - 165 BIBLIOGRAPHY: 166 - 171 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS This thesis would never have been completed without the assistance, encouragement and perserverence of a host of people. Firstly I would like to thank my parents who supported me both financially and spiritually. To my mother who never gave up hope and to my father whose outward scepticism disguised an inward optimism. To Mary Louisa who gave encouragement when I most needed it and who did so much work in ensuring that it would finally be presented. To Leo Clifford who I imposed upon to do so much research in Wellington, and who returned with invaluable information. To all my flatmates, Jo, Rob, Monique, Julie and Steve, who over the years put up with piles of books and papers in the lounge, late nights and strange behaviour.
    [Show full text]
  • The Other Voices of October: the Russian Revolution of 1917
    The Other Voices of October: The Russian Revolution of 1917 In the Fall of 2017, as we looked back a hundred years after the Russian Revolution, a clearer and more populated picture began to emerge; a different picture from the one that we have become accustomed to. With the ending of the Cold War, some of the political passions that have clouded and affected the interpretation of this global event have begun to fade. This has allowed scholars to think more deeply about what a revolution is, and more importantly, in what ways do they represent a historical rupture that allows us to imagine another future? To mark the centenary of the Russian Revolution in the fall of 2017, I created a graduate course entitled, “The Other Voices of October. The Russian Revolutions of 1917.” Instead of assigning the usual books on Lenin and Trotsky that have dominated Russian history courses for many decades, I looked for works by individual thinkers who had been repressed after 1917, and about political parties that were defeated by the Bolsheviks. The assembled readings explicitly challenge the framing of 1917 as an exclusively Bolshevik revolution, and instead reprise the many political visions, and dreams that surfaced during the tumultuous years of 1917-1921! The revolution of 1917 can be best described as waves of popular movements led by soldiers, sailors, workers, peasants, students, national minorities, and men and women of the intelligentsia: representing a broad spectrum of the Russian empire. Yet, for the most part, 1917 has been represented in historical scholarship both in Russia and in the West as at the time when the Bolshevik party came to power.
    [Show full text]
  • International Medical Corps Afghanistan
    Heading Folder Afghanistan Afghanistan - Afghan Information Centre Afghanistan - International Medical Corps Afghanistan - Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan (RAWA) Agorist Institute Albee, Edward Alianza Federal de Pueblos Libres American Economic Association American Economic Society American Fund for Public Service, Inc. American Independent Party American Party (1897) American Political Science Association (APSA) American Social History Project American Spectator American Writer's Congress, New York City, October 9-12, 1981 Americans for Democratic Action Americans for Democratic Action - Students for Democractic Action Anarchism Anarchism - A Distribution Anarchism - Abad De Santillan, Diego Anarchism - Abbey, Edward Anarchism - Abolafia, Louis Anarchism - ABRUPT Anarchism - Acharya, M. P. T. Anarchism - ACRATA Anarchism - Action Resource Guide (ARG) Anarchism - Addresses Anarchism - Affinity Group of Evolutionary Anarchists Anarchism - Africa Anarchism - Aftershock Alliance Anarchism - Against Sleep and Nightmare Anarchism - Agitazione, Ancona, Italy Anarchism - AK Press Anarchism - Albertini, Henry (Enrico) Anarchism - Aldred, Guy Anarchism - Alliance for Anarchist Determination, The (TAFAD) Anarchism - Alliance Ouvriere Anarchiste Anarchism - Altgeld Centenary Committee of Illinois Anarchism - Altgeld, John P. Anarchism - Amateur Press Association Anarchism - American Anarchist Federated Commune Soviets Anarchism - American Federation of Anarchists Anarchism - American Freethought Tract Society Anarchism - Anarchist
    [Show full text]