Mine Towns: Buildings for Workers in Michigan's Copper Country

Mine Towns: Buildings for Workers in Michigan's Copper Country

by Alison K. Hoagland
Mine Towns: Buildings for Workers in Michigan's Copper Country

Mine Towns: Buildings for Workers in Michigan's Copper Country

by Alison K. Hoagland

eBook

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Overview

During the nineteenth century, the Keweenaw Peninsula of Northern Michigan was the site of America’s first mineral land rush as companies hastened to profit from the region’s vast copper deposits. In order to lure workers to such a remote location—and work long hours in dangerous conditions—companies offered not just competitive wages but also helped provide the very infrastructure of town life in the form of affordable housing, schools, health-care facilities, and churches. The first working-class history of domestic life in Copper Country company towns during the boom years of 1890 to 1918, Alison K. Hoagland’s Mine Towns investigates how the architecture of a company town revealed the paternal relationship that existed between company managers and workers—a relationship that both parties turned to their own advantage. The story of Joseph and Antonia Putrich, immigrants from Croatia, punctuates and illustrates the realities of life in a booming company town. While company managers provided housing as a way to develop and control a stable workforce, workers often rejected this domestic ideal and used homes as an economic resource, taking in boarders to help generate further income. Focusing on how the exchange between company managers and a largely immigrant workforce took the form of negotiation rather than a top-down system, Hoagland examines surviving buildings and uses Copper Country’s built environment to map this remarkable connection between a company and its workers at the height of Michigan’s largest land rush.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781452915241
Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
Publication date: 04/20/2010
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 328
File size: 15 MB
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About the Author

Alison K. Hoagland is professor of history and historic preservation at Michigan Technological University and the author of Buildings of Alaska and Army Architecture in the West: Forts Laramie, Bridger, and D. A. Russell, 1849–1912.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments, Introduction: Negotiating Paternalism in the Copper Country, 1. Saltboxes and T-Plans: Creating and Inhabiting the Company House, 2. The Spaces of a Strike: Company Buildings and Landscapes in a Time of Conflict, 3. “Home for the Working Man”: Strategies for Homeownership, 4. Acquiring Conveniences: Water, Heat, and Light, 5. Churches, Schools, Bathhouses: Building Community on Company Land, 6. Preservation and Loss: Remembering Through Buildings, Notes, Bibliography, Index
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