The Old-Time Saloon

The Old-Time Saloon
Author: George Ade
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Total Pages: 227
Release: 2016-11-04
Genre: Cooking
ISBN: 022641230X

Originally published: New York: R. Long & R.R. Smith, 1931.

Closing Time

Closing Time
Author: Bill Lindeke
Publisher:
Total Pages: 240
Release: 2019-10-15
Genre: Cooking
ISBN: 9781681341378

An entertaining journey into the highs, lows, bright spots, and dark corners of the Twin Cities' most famous and infamous drinking establishments--history viewed from the barstool.

Boomtown Saloons

Boomtown Saloons
Author: Kelly J. Dixon
Publisher:
Total Pages: 256
Release: 2005
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN:

"Boomtown Saloons also offers an equally vivid portrait of the modern historical archaeologist who combines time-honored digging, reconstruction, and analysis methods with such cutting-edge technology as DNA analysis of saliva traces on a 150-year-old pipestem and chemical analysis of the residue in discarded condiment bottles. Dixon's sparkling text and thoughtful interpretation of both physical and documentary evidence reveal a hitherto unknown aspect of material life and culture in one of the West's most storied boomtowns and demonstrate the vital, complex social role that the traditional western saloon served in its community."--BOOK JACKET.

The City and the Saloon

The City and the Saloon
Author: Thomas Jacob Noel
Publisher:
Total Pages: 148
Release: 1996
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780870814266

During Denver's wild ride from frontier mining town to twentieth-century metropolis, the city's saloons, like those of many other western frontier towns, played a vital role in the development of the city. Now with a new preface, Tom Noel's classic study, The City and the Saloon, is a liquid history of how Denver's bars both shaped and reflected the Mile High City's birth and adolescence.

Radical Gotham

Radical Gotham
Author: Tom Goyens
Publisher: University of Illinois Press
Total Pages: 371
Release: 2017-06-30
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 0252099591

New York City's identity as a cultural and artistic center, as a point of arrival for millions of immigrants sympathetic to anarchist ideas, and as a hub of capitalism made the city a unique and dynamic terrain for anarchist activity. For 150 years, Gotham's cosmopolitan setting created a unique interplay between anarchism's human actors and an urban space that invites constant reinvention. Tom Goyens gathers essays that demonstrate anarchism's endurance as a political and cultural ideology and movement in New York from the 1870s to 2011. The authors cover the gamut of anarchy's emergence in and connection to the city. Some offer important new insights on German, Yiddish, Italian, and Spanish-speaking anarchists. Others explore anarchism's influence on religion, politics, and the visual and performing arts. A concluding essay looks at Occupy Wall Street's roots in New York City's anarchist tradition. Contributors: Allan Antliff, Marcella Bencivenni, Caitlin Casey, Christopher J. CastaƱeda, Andrew Cornell, Heather Gautney, Tom Goyens, Anne Klejment, Alan W. Moore, Erin Wallace, and Kenyon Zimmer.

The Saloon

The Saloon
Author: Perry Duis
Publisher: University of Illinois Press
Total Pages: 420
Release: 1999
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780252067815

This colorful and perceptive study presents persuasive evidence that the saloon, far from being a magnet for vice and crime, played an important role in working-class community life. Focusing on public drinking in "wide open" Chicago and tightly controlled Boston, Duis offers a provocative discussion of the saloon as a social institution and a locus of the struggle between middle-class notions of privacy and working-class uses of public space.

The Outlook

The Outlook
Author: Lyman Abbott
Publisher:
Total Pages: 1062
Release: 1915
Genre: United States
ISBN: