Poor Richard's Lament

Poor Richard's Lament PDF

Author: Tom Fitzgerald

Publisher:

Published: 2012

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9780984592135

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Benjamin Franklin has been confined to a private apartment in the Plantation of the Unrepentant for the past two-plus centuries, and has recently received notice that his petition for final processing has at last been approved. In the company of two Intermediaries, Ben appears before a panel of examiners in the Celestial Court of Petitions to make his case. His examiners are three former arch-adversaries: John Adams, Alexander Wedderburn, and Reverend William Smith. By the end of Ben's examination, in which the sins of the Pater are brought devastatingly to light, Ben fully expects to be cast into the abyss. Instead, he's invited to bear witness to what has become of America in the two-plus centuries of his absence. Ben's odyssey of witness begins at his birth site in Boston, passes through New York (where Ben upstages a leadership conference at the Waldorf Astoria), and ends, with wrenching poignancy, at his gravesite in Philadelphia.

Poor Richard

Poor Richard PDF

Author: Jean Kerr

Publisher:

Published: 1963

Total Pages: 168

ISBN-13:

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Helen Hayes Theatre, Stevens Productions, Inc. presents Alan Bates, Gene Hackman in "Poor Richard," a new play, by Jean Kerr, with Joanna Pettet, Joan Alexander, Colgate Salsbury, setting designed by Oliver Smith, costumes designed by Theoni V. Aldredge, lighting by Peggy Clark, associate producers Lyn Austin, Victor Samrock, directed by Peter Wood.

Martyr of Loray Mill

Martyr of Loray Mill PDF

Author: Kristina Horton

Publisher: McFarland

Published: 2015-07-11

Total Pages: 231

ISBN-13: 1476622434

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Union organizer and balladeer Ella May became a martyr for workers nationwide when she was murdered on her way to a union meeting in Gastonia, North Carolina, at age 28. A mother of nine and bookkeeper for the communist-led National Textile Workers Union, May worked to organize fellow mill workers in Gaston County. Her efforts to organize black workers--along with her brash, outspoken manner--incensed the local community and she was shot by an anti-union vigilante group on September 14, 1929. Written by her great-granddaughter, this book tells Ella May's story, including her involvement in the Loray Mill Strike, the largest communist-led strike on American soil. Her most famous ballad, "Mill Mother's Lament," reveals her motivation: "It is for our little children."