Progressives and Prison Labor Progressives and Prison Labor
Series on Ohio History and Culture

Progressives and Prison Labor

Rebuilding Ohio’s National Road during World War I

    • 77,99 €
    • 77,99 €

Description de l’éditeur

During World War I Ohio Governor James M. Cox accepted pleas from the federal government to initiate a road-building project that would make the National Road suitable for military vehicles. A lack of workers threatened the plans, however, so in a controversial move hundreds of convicts, almost all African American, were pulled from Ohio's prisons to comprise the labor corps. The multi-million-dollar undertaking, completed just as the war ended, created what was reputed to be the world's longest stretch of continuous brick road. Today, the enterprise serves as an excellent example of how racism and plain old-fashioned politics permeated good intentions of one of the last Progressive Era endeavors. Drawing on archives, contemporary records, and many previously unpublished photos, Progressives and Prison Labor: Rebuilding Ohio's National Road during World War I recalls the National Road background, the personalities, and the massive construction project that consumed southeast Ohio through the spring and summer of 1918.

GENRE
Histoire
SORTIE
2022
19 juillet
LANGUE
EN
Anglais
LONGUEUR
126
Pages
ÉDITIONS
University of Akron Press
DÉTAILS DU FOURNISSEUR
Baker & Taylor Publisher Services
TAILLE
4,2
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