The Iron Puddler: My Life in the Rolling Mills and What Came of It

The man whose life story is here presented between book covers is at the time of writing only forty-eight years old. When I met him many years ago he was a young man full of enthusiasm. I remember saying to him then, “With your enthusiasm and the sparkle which you have in your eyes I am sure you will make good.”
Why should so young a man, one so recently elevated to official prominence, write his memoirs? That question will occur to those who do not know Jim Davis. His elevation to a Cabinet post marks not the beginning of his career, but rather is the curtain-rise on the second act of one of those dramatic lives with which America has so often astounded the world. Bruised and bleeding in a southern, peon camp, where he and other hungry men had been trapped by a brutal slave driver, he drank the bitter cup of unrequited toil. And from this utter depth, in less than thirty years, he rose to the office of secretary of labor. There is drama enough for one life if his career should end to-day. And while this man fought his way upward, he carried others with him, founding by his efforts and their cooperation, the great school called Mooseheart. More than a thousand students of both sexes, ranging from one to eighteen years, are there receiving their preparation for life. The system of education observed there is probably the best ever devised to meet the needs of all humanity.
The brain of James J. Davis fathered this educational system. It is his contribution to the world, and the world has accepted it. The good it promised is already being realized, its fruits are being gathered. Its blessings are falling on a thousand young Americans, and its influence like a widening ripple is extending farther every day. It promises to reach and benefit every child in America. And to hasten the growth of this new education, James J. Davis has here written the complete story. I have known Mr. Davis many years and am one of the thousands who believe in him and have helped further his work.

James J. Davis
Содержание

THE IRON PUDDLER


MY LIFE IN THE ROLLING MILLS AND WHAT CAME OF IT


Introduction by Joseph G. Cannon


PREFACE


THE IRON PUDDLER


CHAPTER I. THE HOME-MADE SUIT OF CLOTHES


CHAPTER II. A TRAIT OF THE WELSH PEOPLE


CHAPTER III. NO GIFT FROM THE FAIRIES


CHAPTER IV. SHE SINGS TO HER NEST


CHAPTER V. THE LOST FEATHER BED


CHAPTER VI. HUNTING FOR LOST CHILDREN


CHAPTER VII. HARD SLEDDING IN AMERICA


CHAPTER VIII. MY FIRST REGULAR JOB


CHAPTER IX. THE SCATTERED FAMILY


CHAPTER X. MELODRAMA BECOMES COMEDY


CHAPTER XI. KEEPING OPEN HOUSE


CHAPTER XII. MY HAND TOUCHES IRON


CHAPTER XIII. SCENE IN A ROLLING MILL


CHAPTER XIV. BOILING DOWN THE PIGS


CHAPTER XV. THE IRON BISCUITS


CHAPTER XVI. WRESTING A PRIZE FROM NATURE'S HAND


CHAPTER XVII. MAN IS IRON TOO


CHAPTER XVIII. ON BEING A GOOD GUESSER


CHAPTER XIX. I START ON MY TRAVELS


CHAPTER XX. THE RED FLAG AND THE WATERMELONS


CHAPTER XXI. ENVY IS THE SULPHUR IN HUMAN PIG-IRON


CHAPTER XXII. LOADED DOWN WITH LITERATURE


CHAPTER XXIII. THE PUDDLER HAS A VISION


CHAPTER XXIV. JOE THE POOR BRAKEMAN


CHAPTER XXV. A DROP IN THE BUCKET OF BLOOD


CHAPTER XXVI. A GRUB REFORMER PUTS US OUT OF GRUB


CHAPTER XXVII. THE PIE EATER'S PARADISE


CHAPTER XXVIII. CAUGHT IN A SOUTHERN PEONAGE CAMP


CHAPTER XXIX. A SICK, EMACIATED SOCIAL SYSTEM


CHAPTER XXX. BREAKING INTO THE TIN INDUSTRY


CHAPTER XXXI. UNACCUSTOMED AS I AM TO PUBLIC SPEAKING


CHAPTER XXXII. LOGIC WINS IN THE STRETCH


CHAPTER XXXIII. I MEET THE INDUSTRIAL CAPTAINS


CHAPTER XXXIV. SHIRTS FOR TIN ROLLERS


CHAPTER XXXV. AN UPLIFTER RULED BY ENVY


CHAPTER XXXVI. GROWLING FOR THE BOSSES' BLOOD


CHAPTER XXXVII. FREE AND UNLIMITED COINAGE


CHAPTER XXX VIII. THE EDITOR GETS MY GOAT


CHAPTER XXXIX. PUTTING JAZZ INTO THE CAMPAIGN


CHAPTER XL. FATHER TOOK ME SERIOUSLY


CHAPTER XLI. A PAVING CONTRACTOR PUTS ME ON THE PAVING


CHAPTER XLII. THE EVERLASTING MORALIZER


CHAPTER XLIII. FROM TIN WORKER TO SMALL CAPITALIST


CHAPTER XLIV. A CHANCE TO REALIZE A DREAM


CHAPTER XLV. THE DREAM COMES TRUE


CHAPTER XLVI. THE MOOSEHEART IDEA


CHAPTER XLVII. LIFE'S PROBLEMS


CHAPTER XLVIII. BUILDING A BETTER WORLD BY EDUCATION


CHAPTER XLIX. CONCLUSION

О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

1998-05-01

Темы

Blue collar workers -- United States -- Biography; Labor unions -- United States; Davis, James J. (James John), 1873-1947

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