Description |
xxix, 352 pages ; 22 cm. |
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text txt rdacontent |
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unmediated n rdamedia |
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volume nc rdacarrier |
Series |
Quadrangle paperbacks ; QP39
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Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references and index. |
Contents |
I. Beginning -- II. Meadville, Pennsylvania -- III. Johns Hopkins -- IV. Woodrow Wilson-Virginian -- V. Journalism -- VI. The Poor Man's Club -- VII. My Friends the Irish -- VIII. The Law -- IX. Uplifting -- X. Beer and Skittles -- XI. I Enter Politics -- XII. A Rude Awakening -- XIII. A Ten Years' War -- XIV. Tom Johnson -- XV. Mark hanna -- XVI. Making Laws at Columbus -- XVII. I throw Away Ballast -- XVIII. Recasting My Beliefs -- XIX. Pre-War Radicals -- XX. Conflict and Compromise -- XXI. Wealth Without Labor -- XXII. Single-Taxing a City -- XXIII. Leisure -- XXIV. The People's Institute -- XXV. Ellis Island -- XXVI. Business as Usual -- XXVII. Hysteria -- XXVIII. Liberal and the War -- XXIX. Paris and the World -- XXX. Woodrow Wilson at Paris -- XXXI. Unlearning -- XXXII. Working with Labor -- XXXIII. Beginning Again. |
Summary |
Frederic C. Howe lived in interesting times. By education (at Johns Hopkins in the early 1890s) and instinct he was a progressive, in the best sense of that term. From the Cleveland of Tom Johnson to the Washington of FDR he "unlearned" his early predjudices and given values, yet "under the ruins" of it all he kept his idealism.Howe's autobiographical record was originally published in 1925. |
Subject |
Howe, Frederic C., 1867-1940.
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Howe, Frederic C., 1867-1940. (OCoLC)fst01898243
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Social reformers -- United States -- Biography.
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Social reformers. (OCoLC)fst01122841
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United States. (OCoLC)fst01204155
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Genre/Form |
Biographies. (OCoLC)fst01919896
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Added Author |
Braeman, John.
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