Image Theses and Dissertations Redevelopment of the Bethlehem Steel site : a public history perspective View Item
Image Theses and Dissertations Mother nature vs. the Model T : the problem of snow removal in the adoption of the American automobile View Item
Image Theses and Dissertations Black diamonds no more : a technological history of the dieselization of the Lehigh Valley Railroad View Item
Image Theses and Dissertations Cremations, Canes, and Freshman Customs: One Hundred Years of Lehigh Class Traditions This thesis looks at class traditions of students at Lehigh University from the founding of the institution in 1865 until the early 1970s, specifically examining how and why they waxed and waned through the years. Traditions for and by students were readily embraced by the undergraduates. Examples included the Calculus Cremation, the cane rush, freshman/sophomore hazing rituals, and campus rules, such as the one dictating the wearing of a freshman hat known as a dink. View Item
Image Theses and Dissertations The John A. Roebling's Sons Company Kinkora works : independent steel and wire-making in an era of consolidation, 1904-1952 View Item
Image Theses and Dissertations An industrial plague : occupational lead poisoning in early twentieth century America View Item
Image Theses and Dissertations Implements of change : Henry Chapman Mercer and the Bucks County Historical Society View Item
Image Theses and Dissertations A Generation Behind: The Efforts of the Central Council for Social Services and the Community Chest during the 1920s in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania In 1919 the War Chest, which centralized funding for a variety of domestic and international aid organizations, was reorganized as the Central Council for Social Services and Community Chest in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. These organizations attempted to unite social work within the city but were controlled by executive boards that opposed centralized control over the numerous private philanthropic organizations. Dr. William Estes, of St. View Item