Landscape of Industry

Landscape of Industry
Author: Worcester Historical Museum
Publisher: UPNE
Total Pages: 200
Release: 2009
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9781584657774

An illustrated history of the cradle of American industrialization

Hidden History of Worcester

Hidden History of Worcester
Author: Dave Kovaleski
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing
Total Pages: 144
Release: 2021-10-18
Genre: History
ISBN: 1439673837

As the second-largest city in New England, Worcester is well known for its contributions to manufacturing and transportation. However, many other people and events contributed to the building of this city. Timothy Bigelow led a revolution to take back Worcester from British rule almost two years before the Declaration of Independence. Abby Kelley Foster helped establish the first national women's rights convention in Worcester and was a leading voice against slavery. The city was also home to one of the nation's first professional baseball teams, the Worcester Brown Stockings. Join local author Dave Kovaleski as he reveals the stories behind revolutionaries, reformers and pioneers from the "Heart of the Commonwealth."

Gå Till Amerika

Gå Till Amerika
Author: Charles W. Estus
Publisher:
Total Pages: 157
Release: 1994
Genre: Sweden
ISBN: 9781884292002

The Worcester Account

The Worcester Account
Author: Samuel Nathaniel Behrman
Publisher: Chandler House Press
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1996
Genre: Dramatists, American
ISBN: 9780963627797

A fond look back at a time gone by - a personal account of a writer's coming-of-age in immigrant America.

The Great Events of Global History, Vol. 10

The Great Events of Global History, Vol. 10
Author: Various
Publisher: 北戴河出版
Total Pages: 509
Release: 2016-11-08
Genre: History
ISBN:

History, if we define it as the mere transcription of the written records of former generations, can go no farther back than the time such records were first made, no farther than the art of writing. But now that we have come to recognize the great earth itself as a story-book, as a keeper of records buried one beneath the other, confused and half obliterated, yet not wholly beyond our comprehension, now the historian may fairly be allowed to speak of a far earlier day. For unmeasured and immeasurable centuries man lived on earth a creature so little removed from "the beasts that die," so little superior to them, that he has left no clearer record than they of his presence here. From the dry bones of an extinct mammoth or a plesiosaur, Cuvier reconstructed the entire animal and described its habits and its home. So, too, looking on an ancient, strange, scarce human skull, dug from the deeper strata beneath our feet, anatomists tell us that the owner was a man indeed, but one little better than an ape. A few æons later this creature leaves among his bones chipped flints that narrow to a point; and the archæologist, taking up the tale, explains that man has become tool-using, he has become intelligent beyond all the other animals of earth. Physically he is but a mite amid the beast monsters that surround him, but by value of his brain he conquers them. He has begun his career of mastery.