Rough Notes

Rough Notes

Author:

Publisher:

Published: 1891

Total Pages: 658

ISBN-13:

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A journal devoted to insurance and the industries.


These Days of Large Things

These Days of Large Things

Author: Michael Tavel Clarke

Publisher: University of Michigan Press

Published: 2007-08-31

Total Pages: 346

ISBN-13: 9780472099627

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The United States at the turn of the twentieth century cultivated a passion for big. It witnessed the emergence of large-scale corporate capitalism; the beginnings of American imperialism on a global stage; record-level immigration; a rapid expansion of cities; and colossal events and structures like world's fairs, amusement parks, department stores, and skyscrapers. Size began to play a key role in American identity. During this period, bigness signaled American progress. These Days of Large Things explores the centrality of size to American culture and national identity and the preoccupation with physical stature that pervaded American thought. Clarke examines the role that body size played in racial theory and the ways in which economic changes in the nation generated conflicting attitudes toward growth and bigness. Finally, Clarke investigates the relationship between stature and gender. These Days of Large Things brings together a remarkable range of cultural material including scientific studies, photographs, novels, cartoons, architecture, and film. As a general cultural and intellectual history of the period, this work will be of interest to students and scholars in American studies, U.S. history, American literature, and gender studies. Michael Tavel Clarke is Assistant Professor of English at the University of Calgary. Cover photograph: "New York from Its Pinnacles," Alvin Langdon Coburn (1912). Courtesy of the George Eastman House. "A fascinating study of the American preoccupation with physical size, this book charts new paths in the history of science, culture, and the body. A must-read for anyone puzzling over why Americans today love hulking SUVs, Mcmansions, and outsized masculine bodies." ---Lois Banner, University of Southern California "From the Gilded Age through the Twenties, Clarke shows a nation-state obsessed with sheer size, ranging from the mammoth labor union to the 'Giant Incorporated Body' of the monopoly trust. These Days of Large Things links the towering Gibson Girl with the skyscraper, the pediatric regimen with stereotypes of the Jew. Spanning anthropology, medicine, architecture, business, and labor history, Clarke provides the full anatomy of imperial America and offers a model of cultural studies at its very best." ---Cecelia Tichi, Vanderbilt University


The William and Alice (Setchfield) Holmes and Carlos E. Hait Families in Michigan, Kansas, Oklahoma, and Colorado, 1840-1992

The William and Alice (Setchfield) Holmes and Carlos E. Hait Families in Michigan, Kansas, Oklahoma, and Colorado, 1840-1992

Author: Anne Hait Christian

Publisher:

Published: 1993

Total Pages: 356

ISBN-13:

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William Holmes (bp. 1806, d. 1885), son of Francis and Alice Brown Holmes, married Alice Setchfield (1806-1880), daughter of William and Anna Loomes Setchfield, in 1827 at St. Andrew's in Whittlesey. They spent the first forty-three years of their life in Whittlesey, Cambridgeshire, England. In 1848 William Holmes and his 20-year old son, William Francis, left England for America. The rest of his family followed in 1850. They settled in Oceola Township, Livingston Co., Michigan. Carlos Emory Hait (1828-1893) was born at Clyde, Wayne Co. N.Y. He lived in Michigan, Iowa, Tennessee and died in Cottonwood Falls, Kansas. He married (1) Jerusha Tuttle (1833-1857), born in Wysox, Pa.; (2) Elizabeth Bennett (Elizabeth Bennett Richardson), a widow, in 1868.