Showing posts with label Joan Waugh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joan Waugh. Show all posts

Saturday, December 5, 2009

Jewels of history...


Check out the recent publication by my own distinguished professor of History at UCLA, Scholar of the Month on this blog, Prof. Joan Waugh on Ulysses S. Grant. Like all the deeply memorable lectures of Professor Waugh that I still remember years past and all her scholarship, surely, this book will illuminate much for you about the U.S. Civil War and the American hero... I am sure, it will righteously join the jewels of history... I can't wait to read this book for the holidays... Congratulations to Professor Waugh!

Thursday, August 30, 2007

Lowell and Gilded Age America


Josephine Shaw Lowell (1843-1905) was one of the most remarkable women figures in the late nineteenth century, much better known as the Gilded Age in American history. Born into a wealthy New England family, she dedicated her life to eradicating poverty. A Progressive Reform leader, she established the New York Consumers' League in 1890, which strove to improve the wages and working conditions of women workers in New York City. Founder of many charitable organizations, she said, "If the working people had all they ought to have, we should not have the paupers and criminals. It is better to save them before they go under, than to spend your life fishing them out afterward." The Gilded Age certainly reminded of the Dickens' England-- unregulated and exorbitant wealth side by side with complete and irremediable poverty... For more on the biography of this remarkable woman see the scholarly work of Professor Joan Waugh at UCLA (here).