Rockdale
The Growth of an American Village in the Early Industrial Revolution
Format:Paperback
Publisher:University of Nebraska Press
Published:1st Jun '05
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
The story of the Industrial Revolution as it was by experienced by the men, women, and children of the cotton-manufacturing town of Rockdale, Pennsylvania
A celebrated triumph of historiography, Rockdale tells the story of the Industrial Revolution as it was experienced by the men, women, and children of the cotton-manufacturing town of Rockdale, Pennsylvania. The lives of workers, managers, inventors, owners, and entrepreneurs are brilliantly illuminated by Anthony F. C. Wallace, who also describes the complex technology that governed all of Rockdale’s townspeople. Wallace examines the new relationships between employer and employee as work and workers moved out of the fields into the closed-in world of the spinning mule, the power loom, and the mill office. He brings to light the impassioned battle for the soul of the mill worker, a struggle between the exponents of the Enlightenment and Utopian Socialism, on the one hand, and, on the other, the ultimately triumphant champions of evangelical Christianity.
“Extraordinary and brilliant. . . . Rockdale has the dimensions of an important event in American historical writing. It is not only a splendid reconstruction of the past . . . [b]ut a powerful interpretive reading that reconceives the very basis for the study of American industrialization. . . . A book of epic proportions.”—New York Times Book Review
ISBN: 9780803298538
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 794g
554 pages