Hörbuch: On the Trail of The Immigrant
- Download By Way of Introduction audio
- Download The Beginning of the Trail audio
- Download The Fellowship of the Steerage audio
- Download Land, Ho! audio
- Download At the Gateway audio
- Download “The Man at the Gate” audio
- Download The German in America audio
- Download The Scandinavian Immigrant audio
- Download The Jew in His Old World Home audio
- Download The New Exodus audio
- Download In the Ghettos of New York audio
- Download The Slavs at Home audio
- Download The Slavic Invasion audio
- Download Drifting with the “Hunkies” audio
- Download The Bohemian Immigrant audio
- Download Little Hungary audio
- Download The Italian at Home audio
- Download The Italian in America audio
- Download Where Greek Meets Greek audio
- Download The New American and the New Problem audio
- Download The New American and Old Problems audio
- Download Religion and Politics audio
- Download Birds of Passage audio
- Download In the Second Cabin audio
- Download Au Revoir audio
Hörbuch-Genres
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Beschreibung
How did the immigrants come to America? Who were they? What Where did they come from? In this book, Edward Steiner tells of the experiences of immigrants from Hungry, Poland, Scandanavia, Germany, Italy and many other countries as they leave everything and board a boat to an unknown future. Steiner was born to a well-to-do Jewish-Slovak-Hungarian family in a Carpathian village, and was educated in Vienna and Heidelberg and immigrated to the United States in 1886. His later American experiences are quite incredible, precisely because it seems that he made every effort not to miss any of the steps of the immigration experiences; not only the familiar sweatshop saga of his fellow east European Jews, but also metal works in Pittsburgh; mining with Poles in Pennsylvania; cropping for the Amish; being Jailed for months for having been indirectly involved in a strike; getting trapped on a railway bridge as the train was running against him; being brutally mugged in Chicago; being shoved off a cattle train car in Ohio while on his way to becoming a rabbi in the East Coast; and finally, finding a warm Christian home in a small Mid-Western town with a pastor and his wife. Ultimately, in this environment, and under the continuing inspiration of Tolstoy, he became a Christian and a pastor himself, and ever active for progressive causes. This is an important book in the history of immigration.
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