A Women's History of Guernsey, 1850s-1950s


Book Description

This book examines the condition of women in Guernsey between the 1850s and 1950s. Topics covered include education, work, health, marriage, sexual violence, prostitution, and the suffrage. The book features individual case-histories, analysis of legislative measures, and a detailed comparison of change in Guernsey with that in Europe generally.







Jersey's Population


Book Description










Family Maps of Guernsey County, Ohio, Deluxe Edition


Book Description

236 pages with 68 total maps Locating original landowners in maps has never been an easy task-until now. This volume in the Family Maps series contains newly created maps of original landowners (patent maps) in what is now Guernsey County, Ohio, gleaned from the indexes of the U.S. Bureau of Land Management. But it offers much more than that. For each township in the county, there are two additional maps accompanying the patent map: a road map and a map showing waterways, railroads, and both modern and many historical city-centers and cemeteries. Included are indexes to help you locate what you are looking for, whether you know a person's name, a last name, a place-name, or a cemetery. The combination of maps and indexes are designed to aid researchers of American history or genealogy to explore frontier neighborhoods, examine family migrations, locate hard-to-find cemeteries and towns, as well as locate land based on legal descriptions found in old documents or deeds. The patent-maps are essentially plat maps but instead of depicting owners for a particular year, these maps show original landowners, no matter when the transfer from the federal government was completed. Dates of patents typically begin near the time of statehood and run into the early 1900s. What's Mapped in this book (that you'll not likely find elsewhere) . . . 2009 Parcels of Land (with original landowner names and patent-dates labeled in the relevant map) 91 Cemeteries plus . . . Roads, and existing Rivers, Creeks, Streams, Railroads, and Small-towns (including some historical), etc. What YEARS are these maps for? Here are the counts for parcels of land mapped, by the decade in which the corresponding land patents were issued: DecadeParcel-count 1800s149 1810s18 1820s415 1830s1119 1840s287 1850s4 1900s4 1920s3 1950s3 1960s5 1970s2 What Cities and Towns are in Guernsey County, Ohio (and in this book)? Abledell, Antrim, Barton Manor, Birds Run, Birmingham, Black, Blacktop, Bluebell, Boden, Brady, Browns Heights, Buckeyeville, Buffalo, Byesville, Cambridge, Cassell, Cassellview, Cedar Hills, Center, Chestnut Grove Cottage Area, Claysville, Clio (historical), College Hill, Colonial Heights, Coventry Estates, Craig, Cumberland, Derwent, Duch Addition, East Cambridge, East Shore Cottage Area, Eastmoor, Easton, Echo Point, Elizabethtown, Fairdale, Fairmont, Fairview, Fairview, Five Forks, Flat Ridge, Georgetown, Gibson, Greenwood, Guernsey, Helena, Henderson Heights, Hickory Grove Cottage Area, Ideal, Indian Camp, Jackson Special, Kimbolton, Kings Mine, Kipling, Londonderry, Lore City, Lucasburg, Mantua, Marysville, Meadow Village, Middlebourne, Morgan Manor, New Gottingen, North Salem, Northgate, Oakgrove, Oakwood, Odell, Old Washington, Oldham, Opperman, Pleasant City, Quaker City, Ridgewood Acres, Robins, Salesville, Seneca Lake Estates, Senecaville, Spencer Station, Spring Valley, Sunnymeade, Sycamore Hills, Toledoville (historical), Tyner, Walhonding, Warrentown, West Shore Cottage Area, Winterset




Guernsey, 1814-1914


Book Description

First scholarly study devoted to Guernsey in the nineteenth century, as it changed from a francophone to an anglophone society.




Jamaica Ladies


Book Description

Jamaica Ladies is the first systematic study of the free and freed women of European, Euro-African, and African descent who perpetuated chattel slavery and reaped its profits in the British Empire. Their actions helped transform Jamaica into the wealthiest slaveholding colony in the Anglo-Atlantic world. Starting in the 1670s, a surprisingly large and diverse group of women helped secure English control of Jamaica and, crucially, aided its developing and expanding slave labor regime by acquiring enslaved men, women, and children to protect their own tenuous claims to status and independence. Female colonists employed slaveholding as a means of advancing themselves socially and financially on the island. By owning others, they wielded forms of legal, social, economic, and cultural authority not available to them in Britain. In addition, slaveholding allowed free women of African descent, who were not far removed from slavery themselves, to cultivate, perform, and cement their free status. Alongside their male counterparts, women bought, sold, stole, and punished the people they claimed as property and vociferously defended their rights to do so. As slavery's beneficiaries, these women worked to stabilize and propel this brutal labor regime from its inception.




Cambridge


Book Description

Nestled among the foothills of eastern Ohio, historic Cambridge sits on a bluff overlooking the meandering Wills Creek. The National Road, the first federally funded interstate road, serves as its main street and has shaped its identity, character, and economy. The first legal bridge in the Northwest Territory spanned Wills Creek here in 1802, along Ebenezer Zane's narrow trace, which preceded the National Road. In the decades before the Civil War, the city thrived, serving travelers along this important thoroughfare; later Cambridge became a regional center for the coal, glass, and pottery industries. The arrival of the interstate system in the 1960s and the nearby construction of the largest interchange in the world at the time (connecting Interstates 70 and 77) rendered Cambridge's busy main street a sleepier place but one insulated from the off-ramp culture the interstate system spawned. Today Cambridge's historic downtown has undergone a remarkable revitalization, and this town of 11,000 is an American jewel. Cambridge celebrates the heritage of this town and offers glimpses into the lives, labor, and leisure of its residents.




My Sisters Telegraphic


Book Description

"This study also explores the surprising parallels between the telegraphy of the nineteenth century and the work of women in technical fields today. The telegrapher's work, like that of the modern computer programmer, involved translating written language into machine-readable code. And anticipating the Internet by over one hundred years, telegraphers often experienced the gender-neutral aspect of the "cyberspace" they inhabited."--BOOK JACKET.