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Featured researches published by Mary H. Blewett.


Labor History | 2006

Diversities of Class and Gender Experience and the Shaping of Labor Politics: Yorkshire's Manningham Mills Strike, 1890–91 and the Independent Labour Party

Mary H. Blewett

New evidence on gender and class reveals the diverse experiences of male and female workers in the worsted and in the rising silk plush industry in late nineteenth-century Bradford, Yorkshire and prompts a re-examination of the historiography surrounding the Manningham strike and labor politics. In the context of changing labor processes and the exclusionary policies of Yorkshire trade unionism, the striking velvet weavers in 1890–91 were developing their own political and organizational agenda based on gender cooperation and mutual support, similar to the trade unionism of Lancashire. This agenda was deflected by the rise of the Independent Labour Party and the onset of long-term industrial crisis in the West Riding.


International Labor and Working-class History | 1992

Traditions and Customs of Lancashire Popular Radicalism in Late Nineteenth-Century Industrial America

Mary H. Blewett

During a decade of constant turmoil in the 1870s, immigrant textile workers from Lancashire, England seized control of labor politics in the southern New England region of the United States. They were men and women who had immigrated in successive waves before and after the American Civil War to the United States, specifically to the textile cities of Fall River and New Bedford, Massachusetts and to the mill villages north of Providence, Rhode Island.


The Journal of American History | 1991

The Last generation : work and life in the textile mills of Lowell, Massachusetts, 1910-1960

Mary J. Oates; Mary H. Blewett

Oral histories of many of the last generation of Lowell, MA, textile mill workers preceded by two introductory sections. The first presents the historic setting of economic development and subsequent decline of the textile industry in Lowell. The second is a brief explanation of the production process wherin the last generation of mill workers expended so many of their skills and so much of their energy.


The Journal of American History | 1994

Working Families: Age, Gender, and Daily Survival in Industrializing Montreal.

Mary H. Blewett; Bettina Bradbury


Journal of Social History | 1983

Work, Gender and the Artisan Tradition in New England Shoemaking, 1780–1860

Mary H. Blewett


The Journal of American History | 1992

We will rise in our might : workingwomen's voices from nineteenth-century New England

Wendy Gamber; Mary H. Blewett


Journal of Social History | 2006

Yorkshire Lasses and Their Lads: Sexuality, Sexual Customs, and Gender Antagonisms in Anglo-American Working-Class Culture

Mary H. Blewett


Labor History | 1979

The union of sex and craft in the haverhill shoe strike of 1895

Mary H. Blewett


Archive | 2006

Mary H. Blewett - Yorkshire Lasses and Their Lads: Sexuality, Sexual Customs, and Gender Antagonisms in Anglo-American Working-Class Culture - Journal of Social History 40:2

Mary H. Blewett


The Journal of American History | 2003

Mill Girls and Strangers: Single Women's Independent Migration in England, Scotland, and the United States, 1850–1881. By Wendy M. Gordon. (Albany: State University of New York Press, 2002. x, 234 pp. Cloth,

Mary H. Blewett

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Wendy Gamber

Indiana University Bloomington

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