Copper Camp

Copper Camp

Author: Writers Project of Montana

Publisher: Riverbend

Published: 2001-12

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781931832045

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Stories about life in Butte during its fabulous mining heyday.


Undermining Race

Undermining Race

Author: Phylis Cancilla Martinelli

Publisher: University of Arizona Press

Published: 2015-10-19

Total Pages: 240

ISBN-13: 0816533032

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Undermining Race rewrites the history of race, immigration, and labor in the copper industry in Arizona. The book focuses on the case of Italian immigrants in their relationships with Anglo, Mexican, and Spanish miners (and at times with blacks, Asian Americans, and Native Americans), requiring a reinterpretation of the way race was formed and figured across place and time. Phylis Martinelli argues that the case of Italians in Arizona provides insight into “in between” racial and ethnic categories, demonstrating that the categorizing of Italians varied from camp to camp depending on local conditions—such as management practices in structuring labor markets and workers’ housing, and the choices made by immigrants in forging communities of language and mutual support. Italians—even light-skinned northern Italians—were not considered completely “white” in Arizona at this historical moment, yet neither were they consistently racialized as non-white, and tactics used to control them ranged from micro to macro level violence. To make her argument, Martinelli looks closely at two “white camps” in Globe and Bisbee and at the Mexican camp of Clifton-Morenci. Comparing and contrasting the placement of Italians in these three camps shows how the usual binary system of race relations became complicated, which in turn affected the existing race-based labor hierarchy, especially during strikes. The book provides additional case studies to argue that the biracial stratification system in the United States was in fact triracial at times. According to Martinelli, this system determined the nature of the associations among laborers as well as the way Americans came to construct “whiteness.”


Annual Report

Annual Report

Author: Geological Survey of Canada

Publisher:

Published: 1903

Total Pages: 836

ISBN-13:

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Atlases accompany 1885-1891, 1894,1895, 1897-1904.


Mining Cultures

Mining Cultures

Author: Mary Murphy

Publisher: University of Illinois Press

Published: 2023-02-03

Total Pages: 330

ISBN-13: 0252054679

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Butte, Montana, long deserved its reputation as a wide-open town. Mining Cultures shows how the fabled Montana city evolved from a male-dominated mining enclave to a community in which men and women participated on a more equal basis as leisure patterns changed and consumer culture grew. Mary Murphy looks at how women worked and spent their leisure time in a city dominated by the quintessential example of "men's work": mining. Bringing Butte to life, she adds in-depth research on church weeklies, high school yearbooks, holiday rituals, movie plots, and news of local fashion to archival material and interviews. A richly illustrated jaunt through western history, Mining Cultures is the never-told chronicle of how women transformed the richest hill on earth.


Bulletin

Bulletin

Author: British Columbia. Bureau of Provincial Information

Publisher:

Published: 1910

Total Pages: 798

ISBN-13:

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The Battle for Butte

The Battle for Butte

Author: Michael P. Malone

Publisher: University of Washington Press

Published: 2012-04-01

Total Pages: 332

ISBN-13: 9780295802190

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First published in 1981, The Battle for Butte has remained the best treatment of the influence of copper in the political history of Montana. "Fine history: rich in detail, full of finely drawn people, masterfully clear where the subject matter is most complex, constructed to preserve something of the tone and atmosphere of the age."-American Historical Review