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Binaries, boundaries, and hierarchies : the spatial relations of city schooling in Nanaimo, British ColumbiaBrown, Helen Harger 05 1900 (has links)
Urban School Boards and City Councils in British Columbia worked in
tandem with provincial officials in Victoria to expand the state school system in
the 1890s. In discharging their responsibilities, the Boards functioned with
considerable independence. They built and maintained schools, appointed and
ranked teachers, and organized students. During the course of the decade, City
Councils acquired the responsibility for school finance. Nineteenth-century
British Columbia education history, written from a centralist perspective, has
articulated the idea of a dominant centre and subordinate localities, but this
interpretation is not sufficient to explain the development of public schooling in
Nanaimo hi the 1890s. The centralist interpretation does not allow for the real
historical complexity of the school system. Neither does it accommodate the
possibility of successful local resistance to central initiatives, nor the extent to
which public schooling was produced locally.
It is important, then, to examine what kind of context Nanaimo constituted
for state schooling in the last years of the century. This study concludes that civic
leaders and significant interest groups in the community believed schooling
played an important boundary making role in forging civic, racial, gender, and
occupational identities. In carrying out their interlocking responsibilities for
providing physical space and organizing teachers and students, the Nanaimo
School Trustees created opportunities for local girls and, within limits, for women.
The Trustees limited opportunities for local men, and went outside the community
for men who had the professional credentials which were increasingly desirable in
the late-nineteenth century. Both the traditions of self-help and the imperatives
of corporate capitalism intersected in school production in late-nineteenth
century Nanaimo. The focus on securing identities through the differentiating
processes of boundaries and hierarchies which was evident in Nanaimo was
typical of a wider colonial discourse at the end of the nineteenth century.
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Thomas D'Arcy McGee, a biographyBurns, Robin B. January 1976 (has links)
No description available.
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Galician Jewish emigration, 1869-1880Bornstein, Robert J. (Robert Jay) January 1996 (has links)
The purpose of this study is to determine how Galician Jewish emigration during the period 1869-1880 was affected by the Austrian Constitution of 21 December 1867, and in particular by Article IV of said constitution's Fundamental Law Concerning the General Rights of Citizens which granted freedom of movement for the first time to Habsburg subjects. Various demographic, economic, political and societal factors particular to migration, to Galicia and to Galician Jewry are examined in order to establish the effect of the 1867 Constitution on Galician Jewish emigration.
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From the margins : scholarly women and the translation and editing of medieval English literature in the nineteenth centuryBrookman, Helen Elizabeth January 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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Rational religion and the idea of the university : a study of the Noetics, 1800 to 1836 / by Margaret Frances MorganMorgan, Margaret Frances January 1991 (has links)
Bibliography: leaves 456-478 / 478 leaves ; 31 cm. / Title page, contents and abstract only. The complete thesis in print form is available from the University Library. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Adelaide, Dept. of Education, 1992
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"Good and wise work": The Rockhampton Benevolent Society, 1866-1916: The first 50 yearsGriffin, Helen Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
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"Good and wise work": The Rockhampton Benevolent Society, 1866-1916: The first 50 yearsGriffin, Helen Unknown Date (has links)
No description available.
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Widowhood and remarriage in colonial AustraliaHart, Susan January 2009 (has links)
Widowhood and remarriage affected a majority of people in colonial Australia, yet historians have given them scant attention. Today, widowhood primarily concerns the elderly, but in the mid-nineteenth century a considerable proportion of deaths were amongst young adults. Thus many widows and widowers had children to care for, who were also affected by the loss of a parent and the possible remarriage of their surviving parent. Extended families might be called on for support, while communities, at the local and government level, were confronted with the need to provide welfare for the widowed and orphaned, including the older widowed. This thesis considers how widowhood impacted on men and women at all levels of society in the nineteenth-century Australian colonies, especially Western Australia and Victoria, taking into account the effects of age, class and numbers of children of the widowed. When men were the chief family earners and women were dependent child bearers the effects of widowhood could be disastrous, and widows had to employ a range of strategies to support themselves and their families. Men too were affected by widowhood, for the loss of a wifes housekeeping skills could cause serious financial consequences. One response to widowhood was remarriage, and the thesis discusses the advantages and disadvantages of remarriage for men and women. Historians have regarded remarriage as the best option for the widowed, especially for women. Research into remarriage, especially in Britain and Europe, has focussed on demography. Assuming that all widowed wished to remarry, demographers have compared remarriage rates for men and women, within the context of the relative numbers of marriageable men and women in a given community.
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My Mother Could Send up the Most Powerful Prayer: The Role of African American Slave Women in Evangelical ChristianityAbbott, Sherry L. January 2003 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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"In Order to Establish Justice": The Nineteenth-Century Woman Suffrage Movements of Maine and New BrunswickRisk, Shannon M. January 2009 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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