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10 July 2010

Industrial Pioneers by Patrick Brown






by Patrick Brown
In the 1800s, Scranton, Pa. was the face of a new industrial America.






Industrial Pioneers:

Scranton, Pennsylvania and the Transformation of America, 1840-1902

by Patrick Brown



Tribute Books announces the release of Industrial Pioneers: Scranton, Pennsylvania and the Transformation of America, 1840-1920 by Patrick Brown. It investigates the history of Scranton and allows the reader to witness the development of the distinct and interrelated ideologies that defined industrial America. 



Visit the book's web site at: http://www.industrialpioneers.com



Book Summary



During the nineteenth century, Scranton was the face of innovation, immigration, industrialization, and a rising America. Scranton was “the electric city” when electricity was the most exciting invention in the world, and a hub of technology and innovation—between 1840 and 1902, the city of Scranton changed from a lazy backwoods community to a modern industrial society with 100,000 residents. During this time, Scranton’s citizens desperately tried to adapt their thinking to keep up with the overwhelming changes around them, and in the process forged the world views that would define the twentieth century. As globalization, technology and immigration transform the United States today, this book revisits how the people the forefront of the industrial revolution moved from chaos to a new order, and how they found meaning within a rapidly changing world.



Periods of total societal transformation often provide the best material for historians. The way that Scranton’s residents reimagined their value within society in response to the changes around them did not evolve in step with technological and economic progress—rather, those living through these changes slowly and painfully adapted extant modes of thinking in light of their new life circumstances. This book weaves a cohesive narrative that explains how Scranton—and America—went from the personal, egalitarian society of the early days of the republic to the rigidly institutionalized society that endures today.



Praise for Industrial Pioneers



My hometown of Scranton, Pennsylvania was a cauldron of change and conflict during the period from 1840 to 1900. Patrick Brown's excellent book sheds new light on Scranton's transformation from wilderness to industrial center and the development of our country's earliest labor movements. Perhaps more importantly, it introduces us to the people who drove this process and helps us understand how they thought about their changing world and about themselves."






Patrick Brown Bio



Patrick Brown was born in Scranton, Pennsylvania. He graduated Magna cum Laude from Georgetown University, where he won the Morris Medal for best senior history honors thesis. He currently teaches high school social studies in the Mississippi Delta through Teach for America. 





Industrial Pioneers:

Scranton, Pennsylvania and the Transformation of America, 1840-1902

by Patrick Brown



ISBN: 9780982256558 (hardcover)            

$19.95      



Published by Tribute Books:  http://www.tribute-books.com 



1 comment:

Tribute Books said...

Thanks AusJenny for always supporting our authors.

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