The Yankee Stock Cookbook

The Yankee Stock Cookbook
Title The Yankee Stock Cookbook PDF eBook
Author Alma Davenport De la Ronde
Publisher
Pages 89
Release 1994*
Genre Cooking
ISBN

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Yankee Stock

Yankee Stock
Title Yankee Stock PDF eBook
Author Barbara May Honea
Publisher
Pages 462
Release 1992
Genre
ISBN

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Gives brief family histories and pedigrees of many colonial ancestors of the compilers' parents, George Edward May and Josephine Martha Nichols May.

The Yankee West

The Yankee West
Title The Yankee West PDF eBook
Author Susan E. Gray
Publisher Univ of North Carolina Press
Pages 252
Release 2000-11-09
Genre History
ISBN 080786174X

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Susan Gray explores community formation among New England migrants to the Upper Midwest in the generation before the Civil War. Focusing on Kalamazoo County in southwestern Michigan, she examines how 'Yankees' moving west reconstructed familiar communal institutions on the frontier while confronting forces of profound socioeconomic change, particularly the rise of the market economy and the commercialization of agriculture. Gray argues that Yankee culture was a type of ethnic identity that was transplanted to the Midwest and reshaped there into a new regional identity. In chapters on settlement patterns, economic exchange, the family, religion, and politics, Gray traces the culture that the migrants established through their institutions as a defense against the uncertainty of the frontier. She demonstrates that although settlers sought rapid economic development, they remained wary of the threat that the resulting spirit of competition posed to their communal ideals. As isolated settlements developed into flourishing communities linked to eastern markets, however, Yankee culture was transformed. What was once a communal culture became a class culture, appropriated by a newly formed rural bourgeoisie to explain their success as the triumphant emergence of the Midwest and to identify their region as true America.

Eugenical News

Eugenical News
Title Eugenical News PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages 406
Release 1926
Genre Eugenics
ISBN

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SEC Docket

SEC Docket
Title SEC Docket PDF eBook
Author United States. Securities and Exchange Commission
Publisher
Pages 744
Release 1987
Genre Securities
ISBN

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Holding Company Act Release

Holding Company Act Release
Title Holding Company Act Release PDF eBook
Author United States. Securities and Exchange Commission
Publisher
Pages 806
Release 1969
Genre Public utility holding companies
ISBN

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Yankee Colonies across America

Yankee Colonies across America
Title Yankee Colonies across America PDF eBook
Author Chaim M. Rosenberg
Publisher Lexington Books
Pages 347
Release 2015-12-24
Genre History
ISBN 1498519849

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The arrival in 1620 of the Mayflower and Puritan migration occupy the first pages of the history of colonial America. Less known is the exodus from New England, a century and a half later, of their Yankee descendants. Yankees engaged in whaling and the China Trade, and settled in Canada, the American South, and Hawaii. Between 1786 and 1850, some 800,000 Yankees left their exhausted New England farms and villages for New York State, the Northwest Territory and all the way to the West Coast. With missionary zeal the Yankees planted their institutions, culture and values deep into the rich soil of the Western frontier. They built orderly farming communities and towns, complete with church, library, school and university. Yankee values of self-labor, temperance, moral rectitude, respect for the law, democratic town government, and enterprise helped form the American character. New England was the hotbed of reform movements. Yankee-inspired religious movements spread across the nation and beyond. The Anti-Slavery and the Anti-Imperialism movements started in New England. Susan B. Anthony campaigned for women’s suffrage, Clara Barton founded the American Red Cross, Dorothea Dix established asylums for the mentally ill, and May Lyon was a pioneer in women’s education. Yankees spread the Industrial Revolution across America, using waterpower and then stream power. Opposing slavery and advocating education for all children, the Yankee pioneers clashed with Southerners moving north. In Kansas the dispute between Yankee and Southerner erupted into armed conflict. In time the Yankee enclaves in Detroit, Chicago, Cleveland, Minneapolis, and San Francisco fused with others to form the White Anglo-Saxon Protestant elite (WASPs), to dominate American commerce, industry, academia and politics. By the close of the nineteenth century, industry began to leave New England. Yankees felt threatened by the rising political power of immigrants. In an effort to keep the nation predominantly white and Protestant, prominent Yankees sought to restrict immigration from Asia, and from eastern and southern Europe, and impose quotas on American-Catholics and Jews seeking admission to elite universities and clubs. Despite barriers, the American-born children of the immigrants benefited from their education in public schools and colleges, entered the American mainstream, and steadily eroded the authority of the Protestant elite. The Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 opened the United States to immigrants from Asia, Africa and South America. The great mix of races, religions, ethnicity and individual styles is forming a pluralistic America with equally shared rights and opportunities.