Skip to main content.

Mind Amongst the Spindles

Gelesen von MaryAnn

(4,833 Sterne; 9 Bewertungen)

Lowell Massachusetts was founded in the 1820s as a planned manufacturing center for textiles and is located along the rapids of the Merrimack River, 25 miles northwest of Boston. By the 1850s Lowell had the largest industrial complex in the United States. The textile industry wove cotton produced in the South. In 1860, there were more cotton spindles in Lowell than in all eleven states combined that would form the Confederacy. Mind Amongst the Spindles is a selection of works from the Lowell Offering, a monthly periodical collecting contributed works of poetry and fiction by the female workers of the textile mills. The Lowell Mill Girls, as the workers were known, were young women aged 15-35. The Offering began in 1840 and lasted until 1845. As its popularity grew, workers contributed poems, ballads, essays and fiction. The authors often used their characters to report on conditions and situations in their lives and their works alternated between serious and farcical. (Introduction adapted from Wikipedia by MaryAnn) (8 hr 15 min)

Chapters

Preface

25:30

Read by MaryAnn

Abbey's Year in Lowell

17:56

Read by MaryAnn

The First Wedding in Salmagundi; "Bless, and curse not"; Ancient Poetry

17:04

Read by MaryAnn

The Spirit of Discontent; The Whortleberry Excursion; The Western Antiquities

21:05

Read by MaryAnn

The Fig Tree

11:01

Read by MaryAnn

The Village Pastors

29:59

Read by MaryAnn

The Sugar-Making Excursion

9:57

Read by MaryAnn

Prejudice Against Labor

20:29

Read by MaryAnn

Joan of Arc

19:54

Read by MaryAnn

Susan Miller

25:46

Read by MaryAnn

Scenes on the Merrimac

18:06

Read by MaryAnn

The First Bells

19:32

Read by MaryAnn

Evening Before Payday

23:42

Read by MaryAnn

The Indian Pledge; The First Dish of Tea

9:34

Read by MaryAnn

Liesure Hours of the Mill Girls

35:09

Read by MaryAnn

The Tomb of Washington; Life among Farmers

25:22

Read by MaryAnn

A Weaver's Reverie; Our Duty to Strangers; Elder Isaac Townsend

14:55

Read by MaryAnn

Harriet Greenough

18:00

Read by MaryAnn

Fancy; The Widow's Son; Witchcraft

20:28

Read by MaryAnn

Cleaning Up; Visits to the Shakers

20:11

Read by MaryAnn

The Lock of Grey Hair; Lament of the little Hunchback; This World is not our Ho…

23:07

Read by MaryAnn

The Village Chronicle; Ambition and Contentment

28:13

Read by MaryAnn

A Conversation on Physiology

40:06

Read by MaryAnn

Bewertungen

I hope there are still some...

(0 Sterne)

unedited writings saved in archives of the mill girls who were "not educated", who told stories to those who could write and those written in the vernacular. And I hope there is something in here about the Lawrence Mill Girls strikes of 1934 and 1936. Charles Dickens pollyana beliefs in top down reform did little for the "operative classes"(working classes). It was bottom up chartist and socialist movements in early 20th century America and Great Britain that forced better conditions for them. FDR nor did Sir William Beveridge in the UK did not have a new deal or create the welfare state because they were sympathetic to workers, they followed the warnings of labour union leaders and the tumult occuring in the US that a revolution would occur if he did not have a new deal, NRA, public jobs programs, higher taxes on the rich, etc and similar programs in the UK,Sir William Beveridge. to save capitalism. As always MaryAnn has a pleasant voice.

(5 Sterne)

Some of these stories are very moving. A good source material to better understand the people of that time and place. I find source materials much more credible than looking to modern “scholars” to interpret history for me.

Amazing minds and a wonderful peek into history.

(5 Sterne)