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- Title
Worker Housing in the Vermont Copper Belt: Improving Life and Industry Through Paternalism and Resistance.
- Authors
Ford, Ben
- Abstract
During the mid-nineteenth century, east-central Vermont supported two major copper mines and their associated villages. In order to wrest thousands of tons of copper from the earth these mines, the Elizabeth and Ely mines, hired and housed thousands of miners, laborers, and their families. Both mines pursued the same resource in the same environment during the same period, but the Ely Mine developed a centralized village, while the Elizabeth Mine housed its workers in isolated housing clusters. The causes of these differences in worker housing can be traced to differences in scale, setting, and managerial philosophy, and can be analyzed within the larger historical context of Improvement and the larger ethnographic context of paternalism in mining communities.
- Subjects
VERMONT; NEW England; UNITED States; INDUSTRIAL housing; COPPER mining; PATERNALISM; CAPITALISM; HISTORICAL archaeology; MINERAL industries -- Social aspects; SOCIAL control; NEW England history; VERMONT state history; NINETEENTH century; ECONOMICS; HISTORY; UNITED States history
- Publication
International Journal of Historical Archaeology, 2011, Vol 15, Issue 4, p725
- ISSN
1092-7697
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s10761-011-0166-6