Julie Herrada
Posts tagged with Labadie Collection
Showing 21 - 30 of 36 items
As the only grandchild of Jo and Sophie Labadie, Carlotta Anderson was fascinated by her family's history. She wrote an authoritative biography of her grandfather, researched anarchism, labor unions and Detroit history before the auto industry, and preserved original family documents dating back to the nineteenth century. Anderson was a dear friend of the Labadie Collection and, shortly before her death she donated important papers that are now open for research.
Before the 21st century marriage equality campaign, how did LGBT individuals frame their own relationships against the backdrop of a hostile society? Delving into the Joseph A. Labadie Collection, a pioneering record of American social and political protest movements, uncovers some surprising answers.
The first Friday in June is National Doughnut Day! We have items across our collections that feature this delectable treat...
A commemoration of the 100th anniversary of the execution of Joe Hill, the famous Wobbly bard.
On November 5th, 1916, the town of Everett, WA, witnessed a violent confrontation between a citizens’ militia hostile to labor unions and a group of Industrial Workers of the World members sailing into the town’s port to support local workers on strike. The Labadie Collection has secured a new set of archival documents about the Everett Massacre to be available to researchers.
The famous suitcase belonging to the anarchist Emma Goldman has found its final resting place in the Labadie Collection, 75 years after its last journey.
A 5+ year digitization project resulting in over 2,000 social protest images is now accessible to the world.
Take a peak at what a visiting Irish researcher is working on in the Labadie Collection!
A long-desired recon project finally gets attention.
Mark your calendars for a free screening of FOOD CHAIN$: The Revolution in America's Fields documentary.
March 3, 2015 | 4pm to 6pm | Hatcher Graduate Library Gallery
March 3, 2015 | 4pm to 6pm | Hatcher Graduate Library Gallery