Volume 29 (Summer 1996)
Issue 4
Table of Contents
click on a title for an abstract of the article:
- Thomas Goebel, "The Uneven Rewards of Professional Labor: Wealth and Income in the Chicago Professions, 1870-1920"
- Thomas Goebel, "The Uneven Rewards of Professional Labor: Wealth and Income in the Chicago Professions, 1870-1920"
- James Donnelly, "Defining the Industrial Chemist in the United Kingdom, 1850-1921"
- Joel A. Tarr and Mark Tebeau, "Managing Danger in the Home Environment, 1900-1940"
- John C. Burnham, "Why Did the Infants and Toddlers Die? Shifts in Americans' Ideas of Responsibility for Accidents&emdash;From Blaming Mom to Engineering"
- Stephen Lassonde, "Learning and Earning: Schooling, Juvenile Employment, and the Early Life Course in Late Nineteenth-Century New Haven"
- Allyson M. Poska, "When Love Goes Wrong: Getting Out of Marriage in Seventeenth-Century Spain"
- Christine Adams, "A Choice Not to Wed? Unmarried Women in Eighteenth-Century France"
- Laird W. Bergad, "Demographic Change in a Post-Export Boom Society: The Population of Minas Gerais, Brazil, 1776-1821"
- Herbert S. Klein and Clotilde Andrade Paiva, "Freedman in a Slave Economy: Minas Gerais in 1831"
- Ruth Wallis Herndon, "Literacy Among New England's Transient Poor, 1750-1800"
