Discover
Jan 1, 1884 — Jan 1, 1974· 90 yrs

HISTORY

Phillips Russell

7
BOOKS
4.0
AVG RATING (2)
0
READERS
Rockingham

ABOUT the year 1685, Josiah Franklin, with his wife and three children, emigrated from Banbury, England, to seek his fortune in this new world.

— from Benjamin Franklin, 1889

Most acclaimed

#1

Oral history interview with Phillips Russell, November 18, 1974

0.0 (0)

Charles Phillips Russell was born in North Carolina during the late 1800s. After graduating from the University of North Carolina just after the turn of the twentieth century, he spent time in New York and London, working as a writer before returning to Chapel Hill to teach at the University in 1925. For the majority of the interview, Russell focuses specifically on worker education programs in North Carolina during the late 1930s and early 1940s. During these years, Russell taught for one summer at the Southern Summer School for Workers (1939) and for two summers at the Black Mountain College Institute of the Textile Workers of America (1942-1943). Russell describes the role of leaders at these schools, offering insight into the labor activism of Louise McLaren, Leo Huberman, Larry Rogan, and Mildred Price. Comparing his experiences at the two schools, Russell describes the role of faculty, the role of students, and curriculum and recreation. According to Russell, the Southern Summer School adopted a "top down" approach in which teachers exercised a great deal of authority and control within the school, whereas the Black College School was more oriented around the students. Russell also addresses various schools of thought within the labor movement, arguing that while some labor leaders emphasized political action, he believed economic change was more important. As for curriculum at the summer schools, while workers were encouraged to participate in politics as a means of promoting their collective interests, Russell argues that political activism was not overt, nor was it geared towards espousing particular political ideologies.

#2

The glittering century

0.0 (0)
#3

Benjamin Franklin

1889

4.0 (2)

Benjamin Franklin is perhaps the most remarkable figure in American history: the greatest statesman of his age, he played a pivotal role in the formation of the American republic. He was also a pioneering scientist, a best selling author, the country's first postmaster general, a printer, a bon vivant, a diplomat, a ladies' man, and a moralist-and the most prominent celebrity of the eighteenth century. Franklin was, however, a man of vast contradictions, as Edmund Morgan demonstrates in this brilliant biography. A reluctant revolutionary, Franklin had desperately wished to preserve the British Empire, and he mourned the break even as he led the fight for American independence. Despite his passion for science, Franklin viewed his groundbreaking experiments as secondary to his civic duties. And although he helped to draft both the Declaration of Independence and the American Constitution, he had personally hoped that the new American government would take a different shape. Unraveling the enigma of Franklin's character, Morgan shows that he was the rare individual who consistently placed the public interest before his own desires.

Books

Newest First