Among these women was Agnes Kennedy , who responded , " Give us good reasons for spending our money here . ... Roger Williams , Eleanor Roosevelt , Gracie Fields , and a roster of Metropolitan Opera stars , to name a few .
This book will guide you to the must-see locations within the Minneapolis-St. Paul area.
... Marv Ann Johnson , and Adade M. Wheeler , Walking with Women through Chicago History : Four Self - Guided Tours ( Chicago : Salsedo Press , 1981 ) ; Karen Mason and Carol Lacy , Women's History Tour of the Twin Cities ( Minneapolis ...
Women's History Tour of the Twin Cities. Minneapolis Nordin Press, 1982.
City: The Palls of St. Anthony in Minneapolis (St. Paul: Minnesota Historical Society, 1966); Joseph Stipanovich, City of Lakes: ... 1966); Karen Mason and Carol Lacey, Women's History Tour of the Twin Cities (Minneapolis: Nodin Press, ...
The Power of Place : Urban Landscapes as Public History . Cambridge , Mass . ... Women in Historic Preservation : The Legacy of Ann Pamela Cunningham . " Public Historian 12 , no . ... Women's History Tour of the Twin Cities .
Detroit Lives. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1994. Mason, Karen, and Carol Lacey, Women's History Tour of the Twin Cities. Minneapolis: Nodin, 1982. Massey, Doreen. ''Power–Geometry and a Progressive Sense of Place.
54. Jim Parsons, “City Officials Visit Adult Bookstore,” ST, Sept. 23, 1983; David Carr, “Come Tour with Me, Pornography on Parade,” Twin Cities Reader, Sept. 28, 1983, Pornography Subject File, HCLB. 55. Carr, “Come Tour with Me.” 56.
America's Women at Work, 1780-1980 Berkshire Conference on the History of Women (6, 1984, Northampton, Mass.) ... She is also coauthor ( with Carol Lacey ) of Women's History Tour of the Twin Cities ( Nodin Press ) .
"Nancy Drew Banned in Newton? Not Quite, But . . f' Boston ... (On the celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of Nancy Drew.) Pickard, Nancy. Dead Crazy. ... The Nancy Drew Scrapbook: 60 Years of America's Favorite Teenage Sleuth.
workers in 1900 and those in the Twin Cities in 1910, the differences are important. In 1910 New York's immigrant Jewish women were predominantly employed in garment factories whose payrolls included anywhere from twenty to more than ...