Artisans and Industrial Workers

Artisans and Industrial Workers
Title Artisans and Industrial Workers PDF eBook
Author Michael Patrick Hanagan
Publisher
Pages 862
Release 1976
Genre
ISBN

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Artisan Workers in the Upper South

Artisan Workers in the Upper South
Title Artisan Workers in the Upper South PDF eBook
Author Diane Barnes
Publisher LSU Press
Pages 268
Release 2008-06
Genre Business & Economics
ISBN 0807134198

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Though deeply entrenched in antebellum life, the artisans who lived and worked in Petersburg, Virginia, in the 1800s -- including carpenters, blacksmiths, coach makers, bakers, and other skilled craftsmen -- helped transform their planter-centered agricultural community into one of the most industrialized cities in the Upper South. These mechanics, as the artisans called themselves, successfully lobbied for new railroad lines and other amenities they needed to open their factories and shops, and turned a town whose livelihood once depended almost entirely on tobacco exports into a bustling modern city. In Artisan Workers in the Upper South, L. Diane Barnes closely examines the relationships between Petersburg's skilled white, free black, and slave mechanics and the roles they played in southern Virginia's emerging market economy. Barnes demonstrates that, despite studies that emphasize the backwardness of southern development, modern industry and the institution of slavery proved quite compatible in the Upper South. Petersburg joined the industrialized world in part because of the town's proximity to northern cities and resources, but it succeeded because its citizens capitalized on their uniquely southern resource: slaves. Petersburg artisans realized quickly that owning slaves could increase the profitability of their businesses, and these artisans -- including some free African Americans -- entered the master class when they could. Slave-owning mechanics, both white and black, gained wealth and status in society, and they soon joined an emerging middle class. Not all mechanics could afford slaves, however, and those who could not struggled to survive in the new economy. Forced to work as journeymen and face the unpleasant reality of permanent wage labor, the poorer mechanics often resented their inability to prosper like their fellow artisans. These differing levels of success, Barnes shows, created a sharp class divide that rivaled the racial divide in the artisan community. Unlike their northern counterparts, who united as a political force and organized strikes to effect change, artisans in the Upper South did not rise up in protest against the prevailing social order. Skilled white mechanics championed free manual labor -- a common refrain of northern artisans -- but they carefully limited the term "free" to whites and simultaneously sought alliances with slaveholding planters. Even those artisans who didn't own slaves, Barnes explains, rarely criticized the wealthy planters, who not only employed and traded with artisans, but also controlled both state and local politics. Planters, too, guarded against disparaging free labor too loudly, and their silence, together with that of the mechanics, helped maintain the precariously balanced social structure. Artisan Workers in the Upper South rejects the notion of the antebellum South as a semifeudal planter-centered political economy and provides abundant evidence that some areas of the South embraced industrial capitalism and economic modernity as readily as communities in the North.

The Logic of Solidarity

The Logic of Solidarity
Title The Logic of Solidarity PDF eBook
Author Michael P. Hanagan
Publisher Urbana : University of Illinois Press
Pages 288
Release 1980
Genre Art
ISBN

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Artisans Into Workers

Artisans Into Workers
Title Artisans Into Workers PDF eBook
Author Bruce Laurie
Publisher University of Illinois Press
Pages 272
Release 1989
Genre Art
ISBN 9780252066603

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In the only modern study synthesizing nineteenth-century American labor history, Bruce Laurie examines the character of working-class factionalism, plebian expectations of government, and relations between the organized few and the unorganized many. Laurie also examines the republican tradition and the movements that drew on it, from the General Trades Unions in the age of Jackson to the Knights of Labor later in the century.

The Workplace Before the Factory

The Workplace Before the Factory
Title The Workplace Before the Factory PDF eBook
Author Thomas Max Safley
Publisher Cornell University Press
Pages 276
Release 1993
Genre Art
ISBN 9780801480928

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Artisans and Industrial Workers

Artisans and Industrial Workers
Title Artisans and Industrial Workers PDF eBook
Author Michael P. Hanagan
Publisher
Pages
Release 1979
Genre Artisans
ISBN

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Artisans and MacHinery

Artisans and MacHinery
Title Artisans and MacHinery PDF eBook
Author P. Gaskell
Publisher
Pages 432
Release 2008-06
Genre
ISBN 9781436781930

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This scarce antiquarian book is a facsimile reprint of the original. Due to its age, it may contain imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we have made it available as part of our commitment for protecting, preserving, and promoting the world's literature in affordable, high quality, modern editions that are true to the original work.