A hammer in their hands : a documentary history of technology and the African-American experience /
"A Hammer in Their Hands (the title comes from the famous song about John Henry, "the steel-driving man" who beat the steam drill) collects newspaper and magazine articles, advertisements for runaway slaves, letters, folklore, excerpts from biography and fiction, legal patents, protes...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor Corporativo: | |
Otros Autores: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Cambridge, Mass. :
MIT Press,
©2005.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Machine generated contents note: 1. African medicine in the new world
- Cotton Mather on smallpox inoculation (1716)
- account of the method and success of inoculating the small-pox in Boston (1722)
- 2. New world skills
- Runaway slave advertisements
- profile of runaway slaves in Virginia and South Carolina from 1730 through 1787 / Lathan Algerna Windley
- Advertisement for a fugitive slave (1769) / Thomas Jefferson
- Letter from Benjamin Banneker to the secretary of state, with his answer (1792) / Benjamin Banneker / Thomas Jefferson
- 3. persistence of craft
- Advertisements for runaway slaves in Virginia, 1801-1820 / Daniel Meaders
- Life and times of Frederick Douglass (1882) / Frederick Douglass
- fugitive blacksmith; or, events in the history of James W.C. Pennington
- Uncle Tom's cabin (1852) / Harriet Beecher Stowe
- ^ journey in the seaboard slave states (1856) and a journey in the back country (1861) / Frederick Law Olmsted
- His promised land : the autobiography of John P. Parker, former slave and conductor on the Underground Railroad / John P. Parker
- Layout of Parker's Phoenix Foundry (1884)
- U.S. patent to John Percial Parker for a soil-pulverizer (1890)
- Tending a cotton gin (1853)
- 4. new industrial age
- Notes on North America, agricultural, economical, and social (1851) / James F.W. Johnston
- Scenes from Oak Lawn, Louisiana plantation (1864)
- Slave labor as reported in Nile's weekly register (1849) and DeBow's Southern and Western review (1851)
- history of the first locomotives in America (1874) / William H. Brown
- Advertisement in The liberator seeking colored inventors (1834)
- U.S. patent to Norbert Rillieux for an "improvement in sugar-works" (1843)
- ^ U.S. patent to Norbert Rillieux for an "improvement in sugar-making" (1846)
- Confederate Patent Act (1861)
- 5. Finding a place in the industrial age
- Mechanism and art (1873).