Audiobook: Mind Amongst the Spindles
- Download 00 - Introduction audio
- Download 01 - Abbey's Year in Lowell audio
- Download 02 - The First Wedding in Salmagundi; "Bless, and curse not"; Ancient Poetry audio
- Download 03 - The Spirit of Discontent; The Whortleberry Excursion; The Western Antiquities audio
- Download 04 - The Fig Tree audio
- Download 05 - The Village Pastors audio
- Download 06 - The Sugar-Making Excursion audio
- Download 07 - Prejudice against Labor audio
- Download 08 - Joan of Arc audio
- Download 09 - Susan Miller audio
- Download 10 - Scenes on the Merrimac audio
- Download 11 - The First Bells audio
- Download 12 - Evening before Pay-Day audio
- Download 13 - The Indian Pledge; The First Dish of Tea audio
- Download 14 - Leisure Hours of the Mill Girls audio
- Download 15 - The Tomb of Washington; Life among Farmers audio
- Download 16 - A Weaver's Reverie; Our Duty to Strangers; Elder Isaac Townsend audio
- Download 17 - Harriet Greenough audio
- Download 18 - Fancy; The Widow's Son; Witchcraft audio
- Download 19 - Cleaning Up; Visits to the Shakers audio
- Download 20 - The Lock of Grey Hair; Lament of the little Hunchback; This World is not our Home; Dignity of Labor audio
- Download 21 - The Village Chronicle; Ambition and Contentment audio
- Download 22 - A Conversation on Physiology audio
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Description
Lowell Massachusetts was founded in the 1820s as a planned manufacturing center for textiles and is located along the rapids of the Merrimack River, 25 miles northwest of Boston. By the 1850s Lowell had the largest industrial complex in the United States. The textile industry wove cotton produced in the South. In 1860, there were more cotton spindles in Lowell than in all eleven states combined that would form the Confederacy. Mind Amongst the Spindles is a selection of works from the Lowell Offering, a monthly periodical collecting contributed works of poetry and fiction by the female workers of the textile mills. The Lowell Mill Girls, as the workers were known, were young women aged 15-35. The Offering began in 1840 and lasted until 1845. As its popularity grew, workers contributed poems, ballads, essays and fiction. The authors often used their characters to report on conditions and situations in their lives and their works alternated between serious and farcical. (Introduction adapted from Wikipedia by MaryAnn)
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