Books About Robert Owen in the Vassar College Libraries Record 1
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Intimations Surnames
Intimations Extracted from the Watt Library index of family history notices as published in Inverclyde newspapers between 1800 and 1918. Surnames H-K This index is provided to researchers as a reference resource to aid the searching of these historic publications which can be consulted on microfiche, preferably by prior appointment, at the Watt Library, 9 Union Street, Greenock. Records are indexed by type: birth, death and marriage, then by surname, year in chronological order. Marriage records are listed by the surnames (in alphabetical order), of the spouses and the year. The copyright in this index is owned by Inverclyde Libraries, Museums and Archives to whom application should be made if you wish to use the index for any commercial purpose. It is made available for non- commercial use under the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-ShareAlike International License (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 License). This document is also available in Open Document Format. Surnames H-K Record Surname When First Name Entry Type Marriage HAASE / LEGRING 1858 Frederick Auguste Haase, chief steward SS Bremen, to Ottile Wilhelmina Louise Amelia Legring, daughter of Reverend Charles Legring, Bremen, at Greenock on 24th May 1858 by Reverend J. Nelson. (Greenock Advertiser 25.5.1858) Marriage HAASE / OHLMS 1894 William Ohlms, hairdresser, 7 West Blackhall Street, to Emma, 4th daughter of August Haase, Herrnhut, Saxony, at Glengarden, Greenock on 6th June 1894 .(Greenock Telegraph 7.6.1894) Death HACKETT 1904 Arthur Arthur Hackett, shipyard worker, husband of Mary Jane, died at Greenock Infirmary in June 1904. (Greenock Telegraph 13.6.1904) Death HACKING 1878 Samuel Samuel Craig, son of John Hacking, died at 9 Mill Street, Greenock on 9th January 1878. -
Gender, Knowledge and Power in Radical Culture
POETESSES AND POLITICIANS: GENDER, KNOWLEDGE AND POWER IN RADICAL CULTURE, 1830-1870 HELEN ROGERS submitted for the degree of D.Phil University of York History Department and Centre for Women's Studies September 1994 CONTENTS PAGE Acknowledgements Abstract Introduction - Poetesses and Politicians: Rethinking Women and Radicalism, 1830-1870 1 I Poetesses and Politicians 2 II Rethinking Women and Radicalism, 1830-1870 12 Chapter One - The Politics of Knowledge in Radical Culture, 1790-1834 25 I Reason, Virtue and Knowledge: Political and Moral Science in the 1790s 27 II "Union is Knowledge": Political and Moral Economy in the 1820s and 1830s 37 Chapter Two - "The Prayer, The Passion and the Reason" of Eliza Sharples: Freethought, Women's Rights and Republicanism, 1832-1852 51 I The Making of a Republican, 1827-1832 i The Conversion 54 ii "Moral Marriage": A Philosophical Partnership? 59 iii The Forbidden Fruit of Knowledge 64 II "The Lady of the Rotunda" 72 III "Proper Help Meets for Men": Eliza Sharpies and Female Association in Metropolitan Radical Culture, in the Early 1830s 81 IV "The Poverty of Philosophy": Marriage, Widowhood, and Politics, 1833-1852 94 Chapter Three - "A Thinking and Strictly Moral People": Education and Citizenship in the Chartist Movement 102 I Chartist Debates on Education as Politics 111 II "Sound Political Wisdom from the Lips of Women": Chartist Women's Political Education 120 III Chartist Women and Moral and Physical Force 130 IV Conclusion "What Power has Woman...?" 138 Chapter Four - "The Good Are Not Always -
The Right to the Whole Produce of Labour
1RNIA SAN DIEGO THE EIGHT TO THE WHOLE PRODUCE OF LABOUR THE EIGHT TO THE WHOLE PBODUCE OF LABOUK THE ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE THEORY OF LABOUR'S CLAIM TO THE WHOLE PRODUCT OF INDUSTRY BY DK. ANTON MENGEK PROFESSOR OF JURISPRUDENCE IN THE UNIVERSITY OF VIENNA TRANSLATED BY M. E. TANNER WITH AN INTRODUCTION AND BIBLIOGRAPHY BY H. S. FOXWELL, M.A. PROFESSOR OF ECONOMICS AT UNIVERSITY COLLEGE, LONDON ; LECTURER AND LATE FELLOW OF ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE Hontion MACMILLAN AND CO., LIMITED NEW YORK: THE MACMILLAN COMPANY 1899 A II rights reserved INTRODUCTION DR. ANTON MENGER'S remarkable study of the cardinal Dr doctrine of revolutionary socialism, now for the first W time published in English, has long enjoyed a wide reputation on the Continent; and English students of social philosophy, whether or not they are familiar with the original, will welcome its appearance in this trans- lation. The interest and importance of the subject will not be disputed, either by the opponents or the advocates of socialism ; and those who know how exceptionally Dr. Menger is qualified for work of this kind, by his juristic eminence, and his profound know- ledge of socialistic literature, will not need to be told that it has been executed with singular vigour and ability. Hitherto, perhaps because it was not generally accessible to English readers, the book has not received in this country the notice that it has met with elsewhere. Yet there are reasons why it should be of peculiar interest to English economists. The particular method of criticism adopted by Dr. -
The Neglect of the French Liberal School in Anglo-American Economics: a Critique of Received Explanations
The Neglect of the French Liberal School in Anglo-American Economics: A Critique of Received Explanations Joseph T. Salerno or roughly the first three quarters of the nineteenth century, the "liberal school" thoroughly dominated economic thinking and teaching in F France.1 Adherents of the school were also to be found in the United States and Italy, and liberal doctrines exercised a profound influence on prominent German and British economists. Although its numbers and au- thority began to dwindle after the 1870s, the school remained active and influential in France well into the 1920s. Even after World War II, there were a few noteworthy French economists who could be considered intellectual descendants of the liberal tradition. Despite its great longevity and wide-ranging influence, the scientific con- tributions of the liberal school and their impact on the development of Eu- ropean and U.S. economic thought—particularly on those economists who are today recognized as the forerunners, founders, and early exponents of marginalist economics—have been belittled or simply ignored by most twen- tieth-century Anglo-American economists and historians of thought. A number of doctrinal scholars, including Joseph Schumpeter, have noted and attempted to explain the curious neglect of the school in the En- glish-language literature. In citing the school's "analytical sterility" or "indif- ference to pure theory" as a main cause of its neglect, however, their expla- nations have overlooked a salient fact: that many prominent contributors to economic analysis throughout the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries expressed strong appreciation of or weighty intellectual debts to the purely theoretical contributions of the liberal school. -
The Shifting Geopolitics of Coronavirus and the Demise of Neoliberalism – (Part 2)
Reports The Shifting Geopolitics of Coronavirus and the Demise of Neoliberalism – (Part 2) Dr. Mohammed Cherkaoui March 22 2020 Al Jazeera Centre for Studies Tel: +974-40158384 [email protected] http://studies.aljazeera.n Terrible decisions have to be made when hospitals are overwhelmed in Italy [Getty] European economic historians fear some déjà vu memories of the Black Death, which spread in the continent in the mid-14th century and led to the death of one third of the population. This reduction of demography caused scarcity of labor, increase in wages, decrease in inequality, and contested the then-feudal system in Europe. It also paved the way for the Industrial Revolution which Industrial Britain was hit by ‘King Cholera’ in 1831-32, 1848-49, 1854 and 1867. Tuberculosis also was responsible for the death of one-third of the casualties in Britain between 1800 and 1850. This nightmarish refrain comes back now stronger as epidemics have been ‘great equalizers’, and may initiate long-term implications nor only for European economic growth, but also for the world economy. After the US Federal Reserve decided to slash the benchmark interest rate to between zero and 0.25 percent (down from a range of 1 to 1.25 percent) and to buy $700 billion in Treasury bonds and mortgage-backed securities in a Sunday emergency meeting, the Dow Jones industrial average plunged 2,250 points at the open and trading suspended almost immediately the following day Monday, March 16. President Trump has framed the pandemic in xenophobic terms and made the wildly- irresponsible claim that “it will go away. -
Regents Exam in Global History and Geography Ii (Grade 10)
REGENTS EXAM IN GLOBAL HISTORY AND GEOGRAPHY II (GRADE 10) The University of the State of New York REGENTS HIGH SCHOOL EXAMINATION REGENTS EXAM IN GLOBAL HISTORY AND GEOGRAPHY II (GRADE 10) Tuesday, August 13, 2019 — 12:30 to 3:30 p.m., only Student Name _____________________________________________________________ School Name ______________________________________________________________ The possession or use of any communications device is strictly prohibited when taking this examination. If you have or use any communications device, no matter how briefl y, your examination will be invalidated and no score will be calculated for you. Print your name and the name of your school on the lines above. A separate answer sheet has been provided to you. Follow the instructions from the proctor for completing the student information on your answer sheet. Then fi ll in the heading of each page of your essay booklet. This examination has three parts. You are to answer all questions in all parts. Use black or dark-blue ink to write your answers to Parts II and III. Part I contains 28 multiple-choice questions. Record your answers to these questions as directed on the answer sheet. Part II contains two sets of constructed-response questions (CRQ). Each constructed- response question set is made up of two documents accompanied by several questions. When you reach this part of the test, enter your name and the name of your school on the fi rst page of this section. Write your answers to these questions in the examination booklet on the lines following these questions. Part III contains one essay question based on fi ve documents. -
I| and LEEDS GEIEHAL A3D¥Elfliie;
' ^ ./ ^>^^}]^, GfyzYtigt %ntetlis&ut* SOWERBr. —-On Stimiay ihe 3d of April , Mr*. Rushton , of Ovenden i and /Mr. Shaw of Hnddcre- field, prea ched to very large and attentive 4 " ' ¦ : r ¦ ; ' ¦ " ' ¦¦ • ' BIRn HNGBAOT. audienc es. .' - . ;- ":. - ¦ - . -/- . - .:¦: . ' . - IMPORTANT PROCEEDINGS. SEtBY.—On Thursday «yeiiisg, in last week, Mr. Weflt, the East and North Riding Mmionary, This town has been the scene of the most import- deliyered the past week. It seems a lecture in the Market-place, and in ff to ' ' ¦ during ' ¦ ' "¦'' ' ' ' ' ' " ' : . " ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ' ¦ ¦ ¦ proceedings • ¦ - ; ¦ ' ¦ - • ¦ " ¦ talented - - - -; ¦ ¦ , S ¦ ¦; ': ¦ ' and argumentative ^ ¦ ¦ address showed ant ¦ - ¦ - • up . - . - - . • . - . J^fy . ; for tne opinions of all i . fee X> ceufcre of attraction -— the fallacies of the Cora Law Repeal Sturge humbug. CTadeBand shades of Reform have had their represen- arena of YORK;— It haying been reported that the Lord tatives at this celebrated political agitation , Msyor and Viable tbas the proceedings of this week Magistrates had determined to put down and » is AND LEEDS GEIEHAL the Sunday ^venmg leotnres, given in the Charter in Birmingham will nave a powerful influence on thei|_ A3D¥ElfliiE; are casting about for | AssocliMon Room, and that if the Chartists per- minds of those who a remedy aiated in tiose meetings to the manifold grievances complained of by the , or for the future, should country. Tne first thing, then, in the; TOL. Y. NO. 230. ¦ ¦ hold any opb.n air meetings in the city, he should nsople of this SATURMY- . - . -), . APRI^^ % w * sutliSngg Qnarter. ¦' " send order of proceedings shall be be the __ ^^ Five per the police to disperse them ; these reports ' ¦ ¦¦ ' " ' caused a strong nl6f5ter at the couocil meeting of He had put the question to ¦ :¦ ¦;:¦ ¦ GREAT PUBLIC MEETING. -
'New Political History'? 368
Conclusion New Horizons for the New Political History? On 28 August 1860 the Victorian Land Convention was politically discredited after a riot occurred at Parliament House. As noted in the last chapter, the Convention had already turned its organisational energies towards creating a voice within Parliament, where Don, Crews, Gray and Hunter now formed part of the fractious 'Corner' faction led by Charles Gavan Duffy. The 1860 riot arose during another deadlock between Assembly and Council over the Nicholson ministry's Land Bill. This Act, at least in its early form, almost replicated the land selection policies drawn up by the Convention in 1857.' However, the legislation which eventually passed Council in September 1860 bore little resemblance to the original. During the riot the crowd attempted to breach the doors of Parliament house and threatened members with violence as they escaped towards the city. At about ten in the evening the Riot Act was read by the Mayor of Melbourne, after which the menacing assembly was dispersed by a series of mounted police charges. Protesters retaliated by pelting stones at police, several being seriously injured. Hundreds involved in the violence wore red- ribbons 'to denote those who were capable of ulterior movements' .2 Emergency legislation immediately was passed preventing political demonstrations near Parliament House, and during the next few days over a thousand special constables were sworn in for Melbourne's protection. 3 In some ways, it was 1848 all over again. See Serle, The golden age, pp. 296-99. For accounts of the Parliament house riot see Argus, 29 August 1860, p. -
Social Economy As Social Science and Practice
CAHIERde RECHERCHE 2004 # 6 Efficience et Mutations des Organisations Industrielles Social Economy as Social Science and Practice : Historical Perspectives on France 1 Danièle DEMOUSTIER Damien ROUSSELIERE Octobre 2004 Laboratoire d’Economie de la Production et de l’Intégration Internationale – FRE2664 UPMF-BP47 -38040 GRENOBLE Cedex 9 [email protected] Tél. : 04 76 82 56 92 http://www.upmf-grenoble.fr/lepii 1 Social Economy as Social Science and Practice: 1 Historical Perspectives on France Danièle DEMOUSTIER ESEAC, Equipe de Socio-Economie Associative et Coopérative Institut d’Etudes Politiques de Grenoble [email protected] Damien ROUSSELIÈRE LEPII, Laboratoire d’Economie de la Production et de l’Intégration Internationale CNRS-Grenoble II [email protected] Forthcoming in CLARY J., DOLFSMA W., FIGART D. (eds) Ethics and the Market: Insights from Social Economics, London & New York, Routledge, Advances in Social Economics, 2005. 2 Introduction Nowadays social, economic, political and cultural changes have exercised wide influence transforming the surrounding context, affecting organizations that recognize themselves in “social economy” due to their status (cooperative, mutualist and associative). They seem to live off the very contradictions that distance some among them from the solidarity built up, which leads others, in turn, to redefine their projects (Vienney 1994). On the other hand, they provoke the emergence of new organizations that identify themselves as belonging to the sphere of “civil and solidarity-based economy” [économie solidaire]. Thus the actors themselves, the authorities and public opinion on the whole, demand more legibility, in order to recognize the particularity of forms of economic production that assert themselves increasingly in a service economy (Gadrey 2000). -
Periodical Guide for Computerists 1977
PERIODICAL GUIDE FOR COMPUTERISTS An Index of Magazine Articles for Computer Hobbyists January - December 1977 PERIODICAL GUIDE FOR COMPUTERISTS 1977 TABLE OF CONTENTS AMATEUR RADIO---------------------- 3 MICROCOMPUTERS ANALOG HARDWARE AND CIRCUITS------- 3 GENERAL------------------------- 36 APPLICATIONS, GENERAL-------------- 4 FUNDAMENTALS AND DESIGN--------- 37 ART--------------------------------5 SELECTION GUIDE----------------- 38 ASTRONOMY--------------------------6 AL TAI R 8800 & 680--------------- 38 BAR CODES--------------------------6 APPLE---------------------------39 BIORYTHMS--------------------------6 DI GIT AL GROUP------------------- 39 BIO FEEDBACK------------------------ 6 ELF & VIP ( COSMAC)-------------- 39 BOOKS AND PUBLICATIONS-------------6 HEATHKIT------------------------ 39 BUSINESS AND ACCOUNTING------------ 7 IMSAI--------------------------- 39 CALCULATORS------------------------ 8 INTERCEPT IM6100---------------- 39 CLUBS AND ORGANIZATIONS------------ 9 KIM----------------------------- 39 CLOCKS-----------------------------·9 PET----------------------------- 40 COMMUNICATION---------------------- 10 RADIO SHACK--------------------- 40 CONSTRUCTION----------------------- 10 SOL----------------------------- 40 CONTROL---------------------------- 11 SPHERE-------------------------- 40 CON VE RS ION, CODE------------------- 11 SWTPC--------------------------- 40 CONVERSION, NUMBER BASE------------ 11 WAVE MATE----------------------- 40 DEBUG------------------------------ 12 OTHER MICROCOMPUTERS------------ 41 -
Timeline & Bibliography
“The Happiest Days of My Life” Searching for Utopia in Tennessee Timeline and Bibliography Tennessee State Library and Archives 403 Seventh Avenue North, Nashville, Tennessee 37243-0312 Timeline : Major Utopian Colonies 1800 Second Great Revival: religious outpouring across the mid-South follows five-day revivals during which people spoke in tongues, fell to the ground, entered near-comas, and professed their faith. 1800-50 Significant religious and political utopian communities are planted in New England, New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky, and Tennessee. 1808 Congress bans the importation of slaves into the U.S. after January 1, 1808, but slave shipments to American will continue virtually unchallenged until 1859. 1809 Shaker colonies are established at South Union and Pleasant Hill, Kentucky. 1814 The Harmony Society, religious separatists led by George Rapp, found Harmonie on the Wabash in New Harmony, Indiana. 1816 The American Colonization society is formed to encourage and enable the resettlement of American slaves in Africa. Their efforts will lead to the founding of Liberia in 1820. 1819 The Panic of 1819 is the country’s first major financial crisis, with widespread unemploy- ment, numerous bank foreclosures, and a decline in manufacturing and agriculture. 1825-26 Fanny Wright buys 4,000 acres of land in West Tennessee for her utopian experiment at Nashoba. The venture is political and cultural rather than religious: Nashoba’s interracial community is an early effort to provide an alternative to slavery. 1825 The Harmonists move to Economy, Pennsylvania. Robert Owen, hoping to create a more perfect society through free education and the abolition of social classes and personal wealth, buys their remarkably well-planned Indiana town and the surrounding lands for his communitarian experiment, New Harmony. -
The Origins and Development of the Fabian Society, 1884-1900
Loyola University Chicago Loyola eCommons Dissertations Theses and Dissertations 1986 The Origins and Development of the Fabian Society, 1884-1900 Stephen J. O'Neil Loyola University Chicago Follow this and additional works at: https://ecommons.luc.edu/luc_diss Part of the History Commons Recommended Citation O'Neil, Stephen J., "The Origins and Development of the Fabian Society, 1884-1900" (1986). Dissertations. 2491. https://ecommons.luc.edu/luc_diss/2491 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Theses and Dissertations at Loyola eCommons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations by an authorized administrator of Loyola eCommons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 License. Copyright © 1986 Stephen J. O'Neil /11/ THE ORIGINS AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE FABIAN SOCIETY, 1884-1900 by Stephen J. O'Neil A Dissertation Submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School of Loyola University of Chicago in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy August 1986 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS This work is the product of research over several years' span. Therefore, while I am endebted to many parties my first debt of thanks must be to my advisor Dr. Jo Hays of the Department of History, Loyola University of Chicago; for without his continuing advice and assistance over these years, this project would never have been completed. I am also grateful to Professors Walker and Gutek of Loyola who, as members of my dissertation committee, have also provided many sug gestions and continual encouraqement in completing this project.