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Harlan Miners Speak Report on Terrorism in the Kentucky Coal Fields

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ISBN-10: 0813191874

ISBN-13: 9780813191874

Edition: 2008

Authors: John C. Hennen, Defense of Political Prisoners National Committee, Theodore Dreiser, Lester Cohen, Anna Rochester

List price: $30.00
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Description:

The Dreiser Committee, including writers Theodore Dreiser, John Dos Passos, and Sherwood Anderson, investigated the desperate situation of striking Kentucky miners in November 1931. When the Communist-led National Miners Union competed against the more conservative United Mine Workers of America for greater union membership, class resentment turned to warfare. Harlan Miners Speak, originally published in 1932, is an invaluable record that illustrates the living and working conditions of the miners during the 1930s. This edition ofHarlan Miners Speak, with a new introduction by noted historian John C. Hennen, offers readers an in-depth look at a pivotal crisis in the complex history of this…    
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Book details

List price: $30.00
Copyright year: 2008
Publisher: University Press of Kentucky
Publication date: 4/18/2008
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 352
Size: 5.50" wide x 8.50" long x 0.93" tall
Weight: 0.990
Language: English

Theodore Dreiser was born in Terre Haute, Indiana, the twelfth of 13 children. His childhood was spent in poverty, or near poverty, and his family moved often. In spite of the constant relocations, Dreiser managed to attend school, and, with the financial aid of a sympathetic high school teacher, he was able to attend Indiana University. However, the need for income forced him to leave college after one year and take a job as a reporter in Chicago. Over the next 10 years, Dreiser held a variety of newspaper jobs in Pittsburgh, St. Louis, and finally New York. He published his first novel, Sister Carrie in 1900, but because the publisher's wife considered its language and subject matter too…    

Aunt Molly Jackson's Blues
A Statement of the Purposes of the National Committee for the Defense of Political Prisoners
Introduction
Bloody Ground
Class War in Kentucky
Organizing a Union in Kentucky
Who Owns the Mines?
The Lawlessness of the Law in Kentucky
Dynamite and Harlan County Jail
Harlan County and the Press
Representing the Press
Living Conditions in the Coal Fields
The Miners Speak for Themselves
The Writer's Committee
Affidavits of Jim Grace and Debs Moreland
Arrival in Pineville and Testimony Taken in Pineville
Harlan Town and Testimony Taken in Harlan
Further Testimony in Harlan
What the Law Had to Say
The Free Speech Speakin's
I Want to be Counted
A Hearing in Washington