Produktart
Zustand
Einband
Weitere Eigenschaften
Land des Verkäufers
Verkäuferbewertung
Verlag: Northeastern, Boston, MA, 1998
ISBN 10: 1555533183ISBN 13: 9781555533182
Buch
Hardcover. Zustand: Very Good. 313 pp. Tightly bound. Corners not bumped. Text is free of markings. No ownership markings. Near fine dust jacket.
Verlag: Northeastern University, Boston, 1997
Anbieter: Antiquarian Bookshop, Washington, DC, USA
Erstausgabe
Hardcover. Zustand: Near Fine. Zustand des Schutzumschlags: Near Fine. First Edition; First Printing. xvi, 313 pages; Looks new, unread. Thomas H. O'Connor examines the dramatic way in which the Civil War affected Bostonians on the home front and how they in turn contributed to the Union Cause. Four distinctive groups are focused on Businessmen, Irish Catholic immigrants, African Americans, and Women. In this informative microcosmic study of a city during four crucial years, O'Connor (The Boston Irish, 1995) describes how the Civil War's battlefield upheavals were matched by quieter revolutions in metropolitan society, commerce, and politics. One part of O'Connor's narrative--the progress of the Hub's soldiers through four unexpected years of agony--is enlivened by excerpts from contemporary diaries and letters, but covers the same ground as regimental and Army of the Potomac histories. Fortunately, he also spotlights how four local groups, often at loggerheads in the antebellum period, rallied behind the Union after the attack on Fort Sumter. Yankee businessmen, once conservative, not only lent their financial support and civic influence to the mobilization effort, but joined former abolitionist foes like William Lloyd Garrison and Wendell Phillips in pressing Abraham Lincoln for emancipation. Women witnessed the end of their monopoly of the high-skill dressmaking trade, as a result of innovations such as the sewing machine, yet began shedding their professional subjection by becoming nurses and by lobbying for humanitarian causes, thus honing skills they would later employ as suffragettes. Irish Catholic immigrants showed courage in war that mitigated the antipathy of Brahmins; the Irish grew more attached to America and gained economic stability via new jobs then opening up. Still, although Boston's African-Americans cheered the 54th Massachusetts Regiment and slavery's destruction, they remained, at war's end, in segregated neighborhoods that limited their political and educational opportunities for another long century. O'Connor could have made this a more useful contribution to Civil War studies by reducing battlefield summaries in favor of exploring how the wartime economy redrew boundaries of class, ethnicity, race, and gender. But he achieves his ambition to show how the war "disrupted [Bostonians'] homes, altered their work habits, reshaped political alliances, [and] transformed their ideas.'' An estimable contribution to Civil War, urban, and reform- movement history.
Verlag: Northeastern University Press, 1997
ISBN 10: 1555533833ISBN 13: 9781555533830
Anbieter: Bluestocking Books, Sandwich, MA, USA
Buch Erstausgabe
Soft cover. Zustand: Fine. No Jacket. b&w drawings (illustrator). 1st Edition. A work by one of Boston's most prolific historians documents the social, political and every day impact of the Civil War on the lives of Bostonians of different classes, ethnicity, race & gender. Illus, maps photos, engravings. Notes; bibliography; index. xvi, 313 pp. xvi, 313 pp.
Verlag: Northeastern University Press, Boston, 1997
ISBN 10: 1555533183ISBN 13: 9781555533182
Anbieter: Monroe Street Books, Middlebury, VT, USA
Buch Erstausgabe
Zustand: Very Good. Zustand des Schutzumschlags: Very Good. 313 pages. Hardcover. B/w illustrations throughout. Gilt title on spine. Very clean copy, inside and out. From the dust cover front flap: "Thomas H. O'Connor examines the dramatic ways in which the Civil War affected Bostonians on the home front and discusses how they in turn contributed to the Union cause." Record # 30389.