
Cradle to Grave: Life, Work, and Death at the Lake Superior Copper Mines, (Paperback)
(No ratings yet)
Key item features
An exceptionally thoughtful, thorough and well-integrated account of labor, business, community and technological change in a fundamental sector of America''s second industrial revolution."--Philip Scranton, Rutgers University"Precisely what is needed in the field: a work which combines personal experience, community life, descriptions of work and a specific physical environment. It allows readers to 'feel'' what life was like for these miners and their families."--Patrick Gagnon, Silver Lake College"Offers rich and thoughtful accounts of technological change as it transformed copper mining....Lankton has offered a penetrating exploration of an important sector of American mining and a model for exploring the interconnections of technological change, management policies, and workplace traditions during industrialization."--Technology and Culture"Will be quite useful to historians...for its many insights into the paternalistic approach to management, especially in its mediation of technological and economic change."--Industrial and Labor Relations Review"Should appeal to a large and varied audience....I recommend it to all readers who enjoy stories of the past."--Wisconsin Magazine of History"An exceptionally thoughtful, thorough and well-integrated account of labor, business, community and technological change in a fundamental sector of America''s second industrial revolution."--Philip Scranton, Rutgers University"Precisely what is needed in the field: a work which combines personal experience, community life, descriptions of work and a specific physical environment. It allows readers to 'feel'' what life was like for these miners and their families."--Patrick Gagnon, Silver Lake College"Offers rich and thoughtful accounts of technological change as it transformed copper mining....Lankton has offered a penetrating exploration of an important sector of American mining and a model for exploring the interconnections of technological change, management policies, and workplace traditions during industrialization."--Technology and Culture"Will be quite useful to historians...for its many insights into the paternalistic approach to management, especially in its mediation of technological and economic change."--Industrial and Labor Relations Review"Should appeal to a large and varied audience....I recommend it to all readers who enjoy stories of the past."--Wisconsin Magazine of History"A well-researched, interesting account of the rise and decline of the copper mining industry in Michigan''s Keweenaw Peninsula....Focuses on a hitherto neglected aspect of industrial development, and will particularly interest readers concerned with the history of technology and the evolution of corporate labor policies."--Choice"Lankton''s study is thematic, taking the reader from the heart of the mines to the rock-crushers on the surface and ethnic residential clusters that surrounded them. It includes admirably clear descriptions of complex technologies and their evolution; has powerful passages on accidents, safety practices, and usually humane company supports for the maimed or widowed; and it is written in a vigorous and engaging style."--American Historical Review"The single-best treatment ever written of the development of Michigan''s copper mining region. It breaks new ground with its incisive analysis....One of the finest books written on the history of mining, a welcome addition to the literature on the history of the Great Lakes region, and a real path-breaking work combining the history of technology, work, and business in an extremely readable and enjoyable volume."--Annals of The American Academy of Politicaland Social Science"This is excellent scholarship that fills a void in regional and mining history literature."--Minnesota History"Cradle to Grave should serve as a model for historians of technology and labor historians as to how both can benefit by combining their interests and thereby deepening their understanding....Lankton writes clearly and with a passion rarely seen in academic writers....Anyone who is interested in Michigan''s history will find this a very hard book to put down." --Michigan Historical Review"Cradle to Grave is a comprehensive business, social, and ethnic history that belongs on the bookshelf of anyone seriously interested in nineteenth- and twentieth-century mining, ethnic, business, and social history."--Detroit Free Press"Cradle to Grave provides a fascinating account of the history of the copper mines of the Upper Peninsula of Michigan."--The Journal of American History"An absolutely superb study. Few authors have done as good a job of integrating social, business and economic history with the history of technology and historical geography."--David Killick, University of Arizona"Lankton gives a fine analysis of life and work in the mines and traces in detail the important technological changes taking place by fits and starts between 1845 and 1910....a significant piece of work. Thoroughly researched and thoughtfully written with grace and clarity."--Montana"Much of this ground has been covered before....but nobody has ever done as thorough a job of melding together all of the elements in the industry''s history as has Lankton."--Journal of American Ethnic History
Specs
- Book formatPaperback
- Fiction/nonfictionNon-Fiction
- GenreHistory
- Pub date1993-01-11
- Pages348
- SubgenreUnited States
Current price is USD$43.74
Price when purchased online
- Free shipping
Free 90-day returns
How do you want your item?
Try 30 days of Free Shipping with Walmart+! Choose plan at checkout.
Columbus, 43215
Arrives by Thu, Apr 9
.Order within 10 hr 52 min
Sold and shipped by Walmart.com
Free 90-day returns
This item is gift eligible
More seller options (3)
Starting from $43.97
Get free delivery, shipping and more*
*Restrictions apply Try Walmart+ now
About this item
Product details
Concentrating on technology, economics, labor, and social history, Cradle to Grave documents the full life cycle of one of America's great mineral ranges from the 1840s to the 1960s. Lankton examines the workers' world underground, but is equally concerned with the mining communities on the surface. For the first fifty years of development, these mining communities remained remarkably harmonious, even while new, large companies obliterated traditional forms of organization and work within the industry. By 1890, however, the Lake Superior copper industry of upper Michigan started facing many challenges, including strong economic competition and a declining profit margin; growing worker dissatisfaction with both living and working conditions; and erosion of the companies' hegemony in a district they once controlled. Lankton traces technological changes within the mines and provides a thorough investigation of mine accidents and safety. He then focuses on social and labor history, dealing especially with the issue of how company paternalism exerted social control over the work force. A social history of technology, Cradle to Grave will appeal to labor, social and business historians.
An exceptionally thoughtful, thorough and well-integrated account of labor, business, community and technological change in a fundamental sector of America''s second industrial revolution."--Philip Scranton, Rutgers University"Precisely what is needed in the field: a work which combines personal experience, community life, descriptions of work and a specific physical environment. It allows readers to 'feel'' what life was like for these miners and their families."--Patrick Gagnon, Silver Lake College"Offers rich and thoughtful accounts of technological change as it transformed copper mining....Lankton has offered a penetrating exploration of an important sector of American mining and a model for exploring the interconnections of technological change, management policies, and workplace traditions during industrialization."--Technology and Culture"Will be quite useful to historians...for its many insights into the paternalistic approach to management, especially in its mediation of technological and economic change."--Industrial and Labor Relations Review"Should appeal to a large and varied audience....I recommend it to all readers who enjoy stories of the past."--Wisconsin Magazine of History"An exceptionally thoughtful, thorough and well-integrated account of labor, business, community and technological change in a fundamental sector of America''s second industrial revolution."--Philip Scranton, Rutgers University"Precisely what is needed in the field: a work which combines personal experience, community life, descriptions of work and a specific physical environment. It allows readers to 'feel'' what life was like for these miners and their families."--Patrick Gagnon, Silver Lake College"Offers rich and thoughtful accounts of technological change as it transformed copper mining....Lankton has offered a penetrating exploration of an important sector of American mining and a model for exploring the interconnections of technological change, management policies, and workplace traditions during industrialization."--Technology and Culture"Will be quite useful to historians...for its many insights into the paternalistic approach to management, especially in its mediation of technological and economic change."--Industrial and Labor Relations Review"Should appeal to a large and varied audience....I recommend it to all readers who enjoy stories of the past."--Wisconsin Magazine of History"A well-researched, interesting account of the rise and decline of the copper mining industry in Michigan''s Keweenaw Peninsula....Focuses on a hitherto neglected aspect of industrial development, and will particularly interest readers concerned with the history of technology and the evolution of corporate labor policies."--Choice"Lankton''s study is thematic, taking the reader from the heart of the mines to the rock-crushers on the surface and ethnic residential clusters that surrounded them. It includes admirably clear descriptions of complex technologies and their evolution; has powerful passages on accidents, safety practices, and usually humane company supports for the maimed or widowed; and it is written in a vigorous and engaging style."--American Historical Review"The single-best treatment ever written of the development of Michigan''s copper mining region. It breaks new ground with its incisive analysis....One of the finest books written on the history of mining, a welcome addition to the literature on the history of the Great Lakes region, and a real path-breaking work combining the history of technology, work, and business in an extremely readable and enjoyable volume."--Annals of The American Academy of Politicaland Social Science"This is excellent scholarship that fills a void in regional and mining history literature."--Minnesota History"Cradle to Grave should serve as a model for historians of technology and labor historians as to how both can benefit by combining their interests and thereby deepening their understanding....Lankton writes clearly and with a passion rarely seen in academic writers....Anyone who is interested in Michigan''s history will find this a very hard book to put down." --Michigan Historical Review"Cradle to Grave is a comprehensive business, social, and ethnic history that belongs on the bookshelf of anyone seriously interested in nineteenth- and twentieth-century mining, ethnic, business, and social history."--Detroit Free Press"Cradle to Grave provides a fascinating account of the history of the copper mines of the Upper Peninsula of Michigan."--The Journal of American History"An absolutely superb study. Few authors have done as good a job of integrating social, business and economic history with the history of technology and historical geography."--David Killick, University of Arizona"Lankton gives a fine analysis of life and work in the mines and traces in detail the important technological changes taking place by fits and starts between 1845 and 1910....a significant piece of work. Thoroughly researched and thoughtfully written with grace and clarity."--Montana"Much of this ground has been covered before....but nobody has ever done as thorough a job of melding together all of the elements in the industry''s history as has Lankton."--Journal of American Ethnic History
info:
We aim to show you accurate product information. Manufacturers, suppliers and others provide what you see here, and we have not verified it. Â
Specifications
Book format
Paperback
Fiction/nonfiction
Non-Fiction
Genre
History
Pub date
1993-01-11
Warranty
Warranty information
Please be aware that the warranty terms on items offered for sale by third party Marketplace sellers may differ from those displayed in this section (if any). To confirm warranty terms on an item offered for sale by a third party Marketplace seller, please use the 'Contact seller' feature on the third party Marketplace seller's information page and request the item's warranty terms prior to purchase.
Similar items you might like
Based on what customers bought
Crossing the Line: Black Major Leaguers, 1947-1959, (Paperback) $17.90
$1790current price $17.90Crossing the Line: Black Major Leaguers, 1947-1959, (Paperback)
The Irish Lightkeeper's Legacy, (Paperback) $32.08
$3208current price $32.08The Irish Lightkeeper's Legacy, (Paperback)
Onyeka Nwelue: A Troubled Life, (Paperback) $17.21
$1721current price $17.21Onyeka Nwelue: A Troubled Life, (Paperback)
Our Blood Runs Black McClure #1 Mine Explosion, (Paperback) $25.00
$2500current price $25.00Our Blood Runs Black McClure #1 Mine Explosion, (Paperback)
Space Encounters II-rev.--An Underground Principia, (Paperback) $23.49
$2349current price $23.49Space Encounters II-rev.--An Underground Principia, (Paperback)
Too Much and Never Enough : How My Family Created the World's Most Dangerous Man (Hardcover) $15.97
$1597current price $15.97Too Much and Never Enough : How My Family Created the World's Most Dangerous Man (Hardcover)
2854.5 out of 5 Stars. 285 reviewsZantai (My Life Story), (Paperback) $20.10 Was $25.00
$2010current price $20.10, Was $25.00$25.00Zantai (My Life Story), (Paperback)
Come Hell or High Water, (Paperback) $25.41
$2541current price $25.41Come Hell or High Water, (Paperback)
Arafat, (Paperback) $47.95
$4795current price $47.95Arafat, (Paperback)
It's Time to Spill The Beans: A Book About Greed, (Paperback) $14.99
$1499current price $14.99It's Time to Spill The Beans: A Book About Greed, (Paperback)
He's Got the Bass: My Life with Daddy, (Hardcover) $40.40
$4040current price $40.40He's Got the Bass: My Life with Daddy, (Hardcover)
Une Paroisse Vendéenne Sous La Terreur (Hardcover) $34.95
$3495current price $34.95Une Paroisse Vendéenne Sous La Terreur (Hardcover)
Roquefavour, Son Ermitage Et Son Aqueduc : Ventabren (Paperback) $23.95
$2395current price $23.95Roquefavour, Son Ermitage Et Son Aqueduc : Ventabren (Paperback)
Camp, Field And Prison Life, (Paperback) $38.50
$3850current price $38.50Camp, Field And Prison Life, (Paperback)
I Guess I'll Start My Own War: A Personal Crusade for Freedom, (Paperback) $25.15 Was $28.75
$2515current price $25.15, Was $28.75$28.75I Guess I'll Start My Own War: A Personal Crusade for Freedom, (Paperback)
15 out of 5 Stars. 1 reviewsCovina Swept Away $40.40
$4040current price $40.40Covina Swept Away
My Life Out of Prison (Paperback) $23.95
$2395current price $23.95My Life Out of Prison (Paperback)
Some Things You Never Forget: A Memoir of Mama's Morsels, (Paperback) $24.95
$2495current price $24.95Some Things You Never Forget: A Memoir of Mama's Morsels, (Paperback)
Navy Tin Can Man (Paperback) $16.48
$1648current price $16.48Navy Tin Can Man (Paperback)
The Thoughts of the Emperor Marcus Aurelius Antoninus (Paperback) $30.99
$3099current price $30.99The Thoughts of the Emperor Marcus Aurelius Antoninus (Paperback)
Customer ratings & reviews
0 ratings|0 reviews
This item does not have any reviews yet
