Academic literature on the topic 'Delaware City Chapter (Delaware, Ohio)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Delaware City Chapter (Delaware, Ohio)"

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Bulcher, Thomas J., R. Thomas Homan, Thomas H. Marshall, and Joseph A. Lauria. "DESIGN-BUILD EXPERIENCE FOR THE CITY OF DELAWARE, OHIO WATER RECLAMATION FACILITY." Proceedings of the Water Environment Federation 2002, no. 12 (January 1, 2002): 517–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.2175/193864702784164424.

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Varady, David P., and Jeffrey A. Raffel. "Two Approaches to School Desegregation and Their Impacts on City-Suburban Choice: Cincinnati, Ohio, and Wilmington, Delaware." Journal of Urban Affairs 15, no. 3 (October 1993): 259–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9906.1993.tb00162.x.

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Books on the topic "Delaware City Chapter (Delaware, Ohio)"

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United States. Federal Emergency Management Agency, ed. Flood insurance study: City of Westerville, Ohio, Franklin and Delaware counties. [Washington, D.C.?]: Federal Emergency Management Agency, 1993.

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Bilow, Jack. A War of 1812 Death Register: "Whispers in the Dark" : K.I.A., M.I.A., P.O.W.'s, Wounded & Deaths in Vermont, New York & along the Canadian Border during the War of 1812. Soldiers from Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Tennessee, Vermont, Virginia & Washington DC : With a special chapter on the participants in "The Battle of Plattsburgh", American & British. Plattsburgh, NY: Jack Bilow, 2011.

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McNally & co. [from old catalog] Rand. Rand McNally City Map Delaware Marion/Newark Ohio. Rand McNally & Company, 2003.

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McNally & co. [from old catalog] Rand. Delaware/Mar/Up Sandusky, Ohio: City Map (Rand McNally). Rand McNally & Company, 1999.

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Godfrey, Donald G. The Jenkins Television Corporation. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252038280.003.0012.

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This chapter focuses on the Jenkins Television Corporation, founded by C. Francis Jenkins on November 16, 1928, under the laws of the State of Delaware. Jenkins Television combined Jenkins' television and Lee De Forest's radio patents, their technology, and their salable names. It was designed for manufacturing and selling equipment created by the Jenkins Laboratories, and was financed to meet the demands for receivers. This chapter begins with a discussion of Jenkins' relocation of W3XK to Wheaton, Maryland, along with some of the station's program innovations. It also considers Jenkins Television's creation of two television stations, W2XCR in Jersey City and WGBS in New York City; demonstrations of a “flying laboratory” for home transmission of radio movies; and lawsuits that hounded Jenkins and Jenkins Television. Finally, it examines the impact of the stock market collapse in 1929 on Jenkins' companies and the eventual downfall of the Jenkins Television Corporation before reflecting on Jenkins' death in 1934.
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Book chapters on the topic "Delaware City Chapter (Delaware, Ohio)"

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Kirchman, David L. "The Great Stinks." In Dead Zones, 1–20. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197520376.003.0002.

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This chapter discusses one of the first dead zones, the River Thames near London in the 19th century. London used the river as a sewer to dispose of untreated human waste and garbage, causing oxygen to disappear and gut-wrenching odors to well up, shutting down the city in the summer of 1858, aka the Great Stink. The sewage also carried pathogens that contaminated drinking water. The chapter also points out that dead zones were common in other rivers near large cities, including the Delaware River south of Philadelphia. Wastewater treatment solved the problem, and oxygen has returned to the River Thames, the Delaware River, and many other urban rivers in rich countries. Also discussed is the fact that fish and other aquatic life have also returned, but not completely. Adequate dissolved oxygen is essential, but more is needed to make a habitat livable and to ensure the complete recovery of aquatic life.
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Tenney, Tabitha Gilman. "Chapter I." In Female Quixotism, 4–9. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195074147.003.0001.

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Abstract On the beautiful banks of the Delaware, about thirty miles from Philadelphia, dwelt a worthy and venerable man, by the name of Sheldon. In his younger days, he had been a considerable traveller, and had consequently seen much of the world .Some disappointments and mortifications, to which a tum of mind somewhat singular had subjected him, in some European city, had inspired him with a total dislike of all populous places. On his return, therefore, from his last foreign tour, he could not be persuaded to fix his residence in Philadelphia, the place of his nativity; but having married a wife, a necessary ingredient in man’s domestic happiness, he purchased an estate near enough to this capital of North America, to enjoy its conveniences and the society of a few of its inhabitants, for whom he had a particular friendship; and devoted himself to agriculture. One daughter was the only fruit of this connexion.-Her history, being filled with incidents of a singular nature, we are now about to give to the public.
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Trollope, Frances. "Chapter XXIV: Journey to Philadelphia—Chesapeak and Delaware Canal—City of Philadelphia—Miss Wright’s Lecture." In Domestic Manners of the Americans. Oxford University Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/owc/9780199676873.003.0027.

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In the latter part of August, 1830,* we paid a visit to Phildelaphia, and, notwithstanding the season, we were so fortunate as to have both bright and temperate weather for the expedition. The road from Washington to Baltimore, which was our first...
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Fennell, Christopher C. "Forges, Furnaces, and Metallurgy." In The Archaeology of Craft and Industry, 102–30. University Press of Florida, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5744/florida/9780813069043.003.0005.

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This chapter first surveys the diverse methods for melting and shaping iron. I then consider a series of case studies in which archaeological research has contributed to understanding the strategic choices of ironmasters as they confronted myriad contingencies and opportunities. Archaeologists explored early smelting activities in pueblos in New Mexico in the 1600s. Those activities were dwarfed by enterprises launched in British North America in the 1700s. Large-scale investments on the Saugus River in Massachusetts and in Trenton, New Jersey, were followed by more circumspect investments in Delaware, Maryland, and Pennsylvania. An early form of vertically integrated enterprise in an iron plantation in South Carolina, was exceeded by far-flung, interdependent networks of production at the Tredegar works of Virginia. The remarkable resilience of women in managing family-run iron plants played out in Ohio and Pennsylvania. Notable technological innovations were undertaken at iron manufacturers in Tennessee and New York. Class dynamics shaped the residential landscape of managers and workers in Michigan. Finally, a quest for accelerated water power to propel iron foundries in West Virginia cost little in capital and a staggering price in lives lost.
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"Toni Cade Bambara's Community-Controlled and Multimodal Pedagogy." In Open Admissions, 19–59. Duke University Press, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/9781478059639-002.

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This chapter explores how, in the Search for Education, Elevation, and Knowledge (SEEK) program, Toni Cade Bambara, Barbara Christian, and Addison Gayle developed student-centered teaching methods to empower educationally disenfranchised students. Among their many creative approaches, it focuses on two dimensions of Bambara’s teaching. First, it illustrates how she developed a community-controlled pedagogy that involved students in collective decision-making about their learning. Second, it shows how she developed what is now called a “multimodal” or “multimedia” pedagogy that taught students to compose in different media, genres, and forms. This chapter also recovers the classroom context of Bambara’s landmark anthology The Black Woman (1970), which she edited while teaching at City College. The final section follows Bambara beyond the era of open admissions to show how she continued developing these methods both in universities (Duke University, Carleton College, and the University of Delaware) and in local community organizations like Philadelphia’s Scribe Video Center, where her teaching could more effectively serve Black communities.
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Trollope, Frances. "Chapter XXX: Journey to New York—Delaware River—Stage-coach—City of New York—Collegiate Institute for Young Ladies—Theatres—Public Garden—Churches—Morris Canal—Fashions—Carriages." In Domestic Manners of the Americans. Oxford University Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/owc/9780199676873.003.0033.

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At length, spite of the lingering pace necessarily attending consultations, and arrangements across the Atlantic, our plans were finally settled; the coming spring was to shew us New York and Niagara and the early summer was to convey us home. No sooner did the letter...
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McCreless, Patrick. "Richard Allen and the Sacred Music of Black Americans, 1740–1850." In Theology, Music, and Modernity, 201–16. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198846550.003.0010.

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This chapter’s central claim is that the notion of freedom, in the context of theology, music, and modernity (1740–1850), is incomplete if it does not address the sacred music of the enslaved people of North America during this period—a population for whom theology, music, and freedom were of enormous personal and social consequence. The central figure in this regard is Richard Allen (1760–1831), who in 1816 founded the African Methodist Episcopal (AME) Church, the first independent black religious denomination in the United States. Allen was born enslaved, in Philadelphia or Delaware, but was able to purchase his freedom in 1783. He had already had a conversion experience in 1777, and once he gained his freedom, he became an itinerant preacher, ultimately settling in Philadelphia, where he preached at St George’s Methodist Church and a variety of venues in the city. In 1794 he led a walkout of black members at St George’s, in protest of racism; and over the course of a number of years he founded Mother Bethel, which would become the original church of the AME. This chapter situates Allen in the development of black sacred music in the US: first, as the publisher of hymnals for his church (two in 1801, and another in 1818); and second, as an important arbitrator between the traditions and performance styles of Protestant hymnody as inherited in the British colonies, and an evolving oral tradition and performance style of black sacred music.
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"me to Wall Street several times since the war. When dis-cussing these investments I found it fascinating to discover that the ablest minds in Wall Street are still conscious of the 'Covered Wagon' in framing their plans. Sitting in air-conditioned offices, aided by every gadget that modern science can devise, it at first seems paradoxical that bankers and brokers should be talking as a matter of course of opportunities for further expansion not only in the West but in other areas. For example, in 1954 I was told that the United States Steel Corporation was putting up a new plant in New Jersey 'to improve its competitive position in the Eastern States'. The idea of such an industrial giant being still in the least bit concerned about competition was frankly an eye-opener. Similarly, it was news to learn that most market agreements between the oil companies had been torn up, so that the public was getting the benefit of full competition in supplies and prices. But the Covered Wagon was most in evidence in discussing the shares of public utility companies, banks and stores. 'Continuous growth ahead' was predicted for a power company in Delaware; on the other hand a similar undertaking in another State was said to have no such prospects, since it was operating in an area where conditions were highly regulated. While the shares of certain New York banks offered small growth prospects, greater appreciation was expected in the shares of banks in Cleveland, Ohio and Kansas City. Those in California were not favoured, as the tremendous expansion there had still to be digested. Another factor in Wall Street is the increasing influence of." In Something in the City (RLE Banking & Finance), 80–87. Routledge, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203117606-17.

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