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American Labor Museum/Botto House National Landmark
Unpublished Works
1. The Suppression of Civil Liberties: Mark Frank Hague & the CIO Organizing Drive
in Jersey City, 1937-1939
2. Oral Histories: Local Dutch Families in NJ
3. Paterson Archaeology: Salvage Project, 1973-1976
4. The Roots and Results of Radicalism Among Piedmontese Silk Workers, 1848-1913
5. Technology Diffusion and the Transfer of silk: Nineteenth Century English Mil
migration to Paterson, NJ
6. Labor Conflict and Technological Change: The Family Shop in Paterson, NJ
7. Attuning the TWUA to the Problems of New Organization, 1972-1973
8. Women’s Work in the Paterson, New Jersey Silk Industry During the Nineteenth and
Early Twentieth Centuries
9. International Chemical Workers, 1937-1987
10. The Paterson Silk Strike of 1913
11. Oral Histories: Notes & Transcripts
12. A Weaver’s Son
13. The Silk Legacy
14. Textile Workers Union of America: Oral History Project
15. DRAFT: Chapter 2, History of the Political Cultures Of Paterson
16. How to Remain Non-Union (Course Outline)
17. A Comparison of the Years 1909 and 1919 to Determine If the Paterson Silk Strike of
1913 Was Truly a Loss to Labor
18. Big government, Big Labor, Small Town Workers: Unionization in Dalton, Georgia
in the 1930s
19. The Paterson Silk Strike of 1913 (Historical Paper)
20. An Examination of the Development of the First Accredited Labor College in the
United States
21. An Investigation of the Growth and Decline of the silk Industry in Paterson, New
Jersey
American Labor Museum/Botto House National Landmark
Unpublished Works
22. Shirts and Dresses: Made in New Haven
23. Memories of Home: Five Homes of Paterson, New Jersey Silk Laborers During the
Silk Strike Era (1913)
24. Bread and Roses: The Rebel Girls of the Paterson Silk Strike of 1913
25. Joseph P. McDonnell: Labor Organizer in Europe & America
26. Silk City Strikes in 1913
27. Artisans into Millhands: Early Labor conflicts in Paterson, New Jersey 1828-1835
28. The Paterson Silk Strike of 1913: Viewed from and Ideological Perspective
29. A Study of Italian Gardens in the Northeast United States, 1900-1945
30. Catholicism & the San Francisco Labor ?Movement, 1896-1921
31. Yours for the Good fight: The Effects of Industrial Decline in the Hatting, Textile and
Machine Tool Industries in Orange and Paterson, New Jersey in the 1920s
32. Silk: An Original Teleplay
33. Italian Anarchism
34. The Pageant of the Paterson Silk Strike: “A Share of Life”
35. The Labor Leaders of Twentieth Century New Jersey
36. Collective Bargaining: Unions and Companies (Employees)
37. Leadership and Human Behavior
38. Human Relations
39. Paterson’s Dublin
40. Winders, Warpers and Girls on the Loom
41. The Emigration of Silk Workers from England to the United States of America in the
Nineteenth Century, With Special Reference to Coventry, Macclesfield, Paterson,
New Jersey and South Manchester, Connecticut
42. Occupational Changes of the Ackermans and Hoppers – Paterson, NJ (1860-1920)
43. Children in the Labor Movement: From Child Labor to Child Care
American Labor Museum/Botto House National Landmark
Unpublished Works
44. The Twentieth Century: An Epic of America and World Events
45. Economics and Ethnicity: An Archaeological Perspective on Nineteenth Century
Paterson, New Jersey
46. The 1913 Paterson Silk Strike As A Way Of Life
47. The Paterson Locomotive Builders
48. Teachers’ Unions
49-50. Recollections of the Passaic Strike of 1926 by:
Martha Stone Asher
Joseph Magliacono
Gustave Deak
Jack Rubenstein
51. David L. Cole: An Analysis of His Philosophy of Labor Relations and Its Impact on
the Development of the New York State Taylor Law
52. Archaeological Perspective – 19th Century Paterson
53. Sol Stetin Oral History
54. Copy of the Original Program for the “Pageant of the Silk Strike”
55. Italian Immigrants and Working-Class Movements in the United States: A Personal
Reflection on Class and Ethnicity
56. The Passaic Textile strike of 1926: Militant Unionism, The trade Union Educational
League, and Forging Labor Unity
57. The Industrial Workers of the World and Sabotage: The Case of Paterson, 1912
58. The Paterson Silk Strike of 1913
59. The Passaic Textile Strike of 1926: Oral History Transcript
60. Bergen 2000. “Organized Labor in a Suburban County”
61. Samuel Gompers: Defender of Labor Rights
62. Southern Textile Workers and the Textile Workers Union of America, CIO, 19451955
American Labor Museum/Botto House National Landmark
Unpublished Works
63. Hard Traveling: Powers Hapgood, Harvey Swados, Bayard Rustin, and the Fate of
Independent Radicalism in Twentieth Century America
64. The Triangle Shirtwaist company Fire ”Triumph from Tragedy, March 25, 1911”
65. Southern Organizing in the Post Civil Rights Era: The Case of St. Lichtenberg
66. The Successful Paterson Strike
67. AFL-CIO
Economic Policy Papers
68. The Story of Working People in America
69. Poems for the Unemployed
70. The Legacy of the Paterson Pageant of 1913
71. After 141 Years: What Dye Workers Have Won in Two Successful Strikes
72. Program Booklet from the Paterson Pageant, June 7. 1913 (copy)
73. The 20th Century Trade Union Woman: Vehicle for Social Change
Oral History Interview with Sophie Cohen, Industrial Workers of the World
74. Their Own Piece: Women, Representation, and the Paterson (NJ) Strike Pageant of
1913
75. A Slow Change in Perception is Still Change – From Pemberton Mill to the Triangle
Shirtwaist Factory
76. The Paterson Silk Strike of 1913
77. Labor Studies in the Elementary and Secondary Schools of New Jersey: A Study of
Its Inclusion in the Curriculum and Implementation By Educators
78. The Voice with The Smile Will Be Gone for A While: A Report On The 1947
Nationwide Strike Of The Telephone Workers Against AT&T With Special Attention
To The Women Telephone Workers Of New Jersey
79. Fifty Years of Modern Labor Relations: An Oral History Interview
80. The Textile Strike of 1926: Causes, Effects & the Role of Women
81. History of the Proud Union Ironworker by Kenneth A. Carolan Sr., Ironworkers
Local Union No. 11 (George Meany Center, National Labor College, Senior Project,
2002)
American Labor Museum/Botto House National Landmark
Unpublished Works
82. United Farm Workers Union Journal, 1972-1973 by James J. Horgan
83. A Synopsis of Local 52 IATSE by Stanley Bleicher, Retiree, Local 52, IATSE
84. How Did Sol Stetin’s Contributions Affect the Labor Movement by Seth Ryan
Wymbs (History 400, Professor Wolk, William Paterson University, May 14, 2003)
85. “Justified Hardball: The Paterson Silk Strike of 1913 from an Industrial Capitalist
Point of View” by Martin Clemis (Montclair State University, Senior Seminar, 2003)
86. “The American Labor Museum/Botto House National Landmark” by Amy Birnbaum
(Seton Hall University, History & Theory of Museums, Dec. 2003)
87. Economic Impact of New Jersey’s Retail Supermarket Industry, Department of Labor
Studies, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, 2004.
88. “The Historical Perspective of Union Ironworkers and their Contributions to
Mankind” by Kenneth Carolan, March 31, 2005. MA thesis, Rutgers U., New
Brunswick, NJ. Dr. David Bensman, advisor
89. Albert Weisbord: Organizing the Unorganized, The Passaic Textile Strike of 1926”
by Mark Fredrick, May 1, 2006. History Internship 400, William Paterson University,
Wayne, NJ. Professor Wolk, advisor.
90. “Oral History Interview of Rose Villano Conducted by Steve Golin – Transcript,”
1913 Paterson Silk Strike Participant.
91. “Oral History Interview of Caroline Golzio Conducted by Steve Golin – Transcript,”
1913 Paterson Silk Strike Participant.
92. “Elizabeth Gurley Flynn: The Paterson Silk Strike of 1913, Can Labor Strife Succeed
in Promoting Class Consciousness?,” by Pamela Czerwinski, Seminar in Modern
Social Movements in American History, Professor Schrepfer, Rutgers University.
93. Oral History Transcript: “An Interview with Lenore Miller, First Female Union
President on the Executive Council of the AFL-CIO by Natalia De Hoyos, April
2007. History Internship 400, William Paterson University, Wayne, NJ. Professor
Wolk, advisor. (On file in Audio Inventory Binder located in Museum Office.)”
94. “Hubert Henry Harrison,” by Anthony Tapia, William Paterson University, Intern,
Prof. Robert Wolk, Spring 2008.
95. “Italian-American Anarchism in Paterson, New Jersey: The Development of an
Italian-American Radical Identity,” by Danielle Marie Strollo, Annelise Orleck,
Advisor, Dartmouth College, 2007.
American Labor Museum/Botto House National Landmark
Unpublished Works
96. “Industrial Paterson, 1913-1955: A Study of Innovation, Intransigence, and Inertia”
by Charles F. Carpenter, Thesis, Master of Arts in Liberal Studies, Ramapo College,
2010
97. Labor Studies in the Elementary and Secondary Schools of NJ: A Study of its
Inclusion in the Curriculum and Implementation by Educators by Angelica
Santomauro, Diss. Rutgers, 1989.
98. Newspaper clippings on the Little Falls, NJ Laundry Strike, 1937, compiled by
Arnold Korotkin, 2012.
99. “The Paterson Silk Strike of 1913: A Curriculum for Grades 5-8” by Meghan
Gaglione and Kaitlyn Brock, WPU interns (Prof. Wolk), May 2012.
100. “Short Circuit: The Light and Power Council Strike of 1913 and the Search for The
Light and Power Council Strike of 1913 and the Search for Effective Organizational
Models in the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers” by Jeffery Grabelsky.
101. “Ironworkers and the American Labor Movement: An Historical Perspective,”
Material for an apprenticeship course taught by Robert Cook, Local 357, Springfield,
MA, 1990.
102. “Jews in the Labor Movement” by Bennet Muraskin, a staff representative, Council
of New Jersey State College Locals, AFT, 2014.
103. “Transcript of Oral History of Sol Stetin, interviewed by Joe Fine and Bennet
Zurofsky,” 1998.
104. “The J.P. Stevens Campaign: Success and Failure in Organizing the Southern
Textile Industry,” by Jacqueline M. Harmon, 1994, MA Thesis, University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign.
105. “An Historical View of the Labor Movement in America,” An essay Presented to
New Jersey Council 52 American Federation of State, County, Municipal Employees,
AFL-CIO New Jersey Council 52 by Rory S. Lakind August 12, 1988.
106. “Images of the Labor Union Official in American Novels: 1880-1920 and 19301940.” Bob Bussel History 621 December 15, 1986.
107. “La Questione Sociale,” an Anarchist Newspaper in Paterson, N.J. (1895-1908).
108. “Social Bases of Class Consciousness Among Textile Workers,” by Rhonda
Zingraff Department of Sociology and Social Work Meredith College Raleigh, North
Carolina and Michael D. Schulman Department of Sociology and Anthropology North
Carolina State University Raleigh, North Carolina.
American Labor Museum/Botto House National Landmark
Unpublished Works
109. “The Public Presentation of History,” by Roy Rosenweig Dept. of History George
Mason University Fairfax, Va. Consents presented at “A Century of Struggles: An
Exploration of Work, Technology, and Culture in Industrial America,” a conference on
American Labor History at the Nation Museum of American History, Smithsonian
Institution, November 16th 1966.
110. “The Labor Movement in the Paterson Textile Industry During the Great
Depression,” by Christina Battagliese December 2 1993.
111. “An Interview with Lenore Miller, First Female Union President on the Executive
Council of the AFL-CIO” by Natalia De Hoyos, History Internship, WPU, 2007.
112. “A Comparison of the 1993 Paterson Textile Strike With the 1013 Paterson Silk
Strike” by Neal A. Growney.
113. “The Paterson Silk Strike of 1913” by Ladeana Artis
114. “A Slow Change in Perception is Still Change- From Pemberton Mill To The
Triangle Shirtwaist Factory” by Gerald C. Dey, December 20th 1999.
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