Sewn in Coal Country

PENN STATE UNIVERSITY PRESSISBN: 9780271084909

An Oral History of the Ladies' Garment Industry in Northeastern Pennsylvania, 1945-1995

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Edited by Robert P. Wolensky
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PENN STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS
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HARDBACK
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Pages:
416

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Description

List of Illustrations

Preface

Acknowledgments

List of Abbreviations

Introduction: Northeastern Pennsylvania and the Garment Industry

1. Dorothy “Dot” Ney: Garment Worker, Union Organizer, and Business Agent

2. William “Bill” Cherkes: Garment Shop Owner and Garment Association President

3. Minnie “Min” Matheson: Labor Leader, Social Activist, and ILGWU District Director

4. Angelo “Rusty” “Bill” DePasquale: Mineworker and ILGWU Organizer and “Enforcer”

5. Anthony “Tony” D’Angelo: Garment Presser and Barber

6. Alice Reca: Garment Worker, Union Organizer, and Business Agent

7. John “Johnny” Justin: Garment Worker, Labor Organizer, and ILGWU District Director

8. Clementine “Clem” Lyons: Garment Worker, Business Agent, and Chorus Performer and Director

Image Gallery

9. Helen Weiss: Garment Worker, Business Agent, and Chorus Performer

10. George and Lucy Zorgo: Union Printers and Labor Advocates

11. Philomena “Minnie” Caputo: Garment Worker, Union Activist, Chairlady, and Floorlady

12. Dr. Albert Schiowitz: Physician and Director of the Wyoming Valley ILGWU Health Center

13. Leo Gutstein: Family Garment Shop Owner and Garment Association President

14. Pearl Novak: Garment Worker, Union Organizer, and Social Activist

15. Betty Greenberg: Mother, Spouse, Activist, and the Mathesons’Daughter

16. Labor, Working-Class, Gender, and Oral History

Appendix 1: The Wyoming Valley Oral Histories

Appendix 2: Glossary of Selected Terms

Appendix 3: Biographical Sketches

Notes

Bibliography

Index



“An important contribution to US labor history and twentieth-century US history. The interviews offer nuanced views and multiple perspectives on labor struggles in the region, offering particularly new and valuable views of the influence of geography on industrial development and the growth of the trade union movement and showing why we need a broad view to understand even local industrial history.”

—Thomas Dublin, author of The Face of Decline: The Pennsylvania Anthracite Region in the Twentieth Century

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