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xi Acknowledgments I have always loved reading other authors’ acknowledgments—​ tracing academic genealogies and taking note of ways of thanking people that I particularly liked. I looked forward to writing my own. Now I have discovered there are no words to thank adequately the people who have so generously and selflessly offered me their time, effort, and wisdom. I will try to do them justice. Historians need capable, friendly, and knowledgeable archivists, and I have had the good fortune to meet many. The staffs at Columbia’s Rare Book and Manuscript Library, the Newark Public Library, the Manuscripts and Archives Division of the New York Public Library, the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, the New York Municipal Archives, the Tamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives, Ellis Island, and the Schlesinger Library were uniformly helpful and full of suggestions for further research. The Wertheim Study at the New York Public Library gave me a quiet space to write the book. Jonathan Frye at the Lindquist Group opened his company’s records to me and showed real enthusiasm about the xii • acknowledgments project. Special thanks to Ellen Belcher at John Jay College, Maida Goodwin at the Sophia Smith Collection at Smith College, Steven Siegel at the 92nd Street Y, and Curtis Lyons and Patrizia Sione at the Kheel Center at Cornell University. Their friendliness and generosity made research a pleasure. This book began at the University of Virginia, where I was lucky to be part of a vibrant scholarly community. The Corcoran Department of History and the College of Arts and Sciences funded the project with travel grants, teaching assignments, and a fellowship. Grace Hale and Brian Balogh read my work and advised me with good cheer, and I am glad to have had the benefit of their insights. I am especially lucky to have worked with Cindy Aron. Her readings of my work were both numerous and meticulous. She could always, as if by magic, put her finger on exactly what would make my argument stronger and my prose better. She continues to be an unfailing source of support, practical advice, and warm encouragement. She is the model of a teacher, scholar, advocate, friend, and mentor that I will look to for the rest of my career. I also benefited from the companionship of brilliant graduate students. Particular thanks to the Junto, Andrew Torget and Erik Alexander, who read and critiqued my very first and feeble efforts at writing in graduate school and have remained (I hope) lifelong friends. Their wives, Alexandra Torget and Carrie Alexander, are long-­ suffering listeners to discussions of historiography and research. I am particularly grateful to Kristin Celello and Melissa Estes Blair, both of whom have read and reread much of this manuscript. They have also happily delivered a wide array of pep talks when the going got rough. Kristin and Carl Bon Tempo are always ready with good advice, no matter how frantic or long-­ winded my questions. Both are brilliant scholars and truly amazing cooks. I am a lucky beneficiary of both talents. Scholars outside of the University of Virginia have also been extremely generous. Eileen Boris is a fierce advocate of my work and has read the full manuscript at least three times. Her revision suggestions were always excellent , and I am in awe of her grasp of the literature on this (and, really, every) subject. Despite the fact that she has no official responsibility for my career, she has always readily offered advice and support. I am grateful to count her as a friend and mentor. Rebecca Edwards read the entire manuscript and bears responsibility for sending me to graduate school in the first place. Miriam Cohen also read a chapter and has been very encouraging. Leigh Ann Wheeler and Dorothea Browder also offered excellent suggestions for revision of part of the manu- [18.227.24.209] Project MUSE (2024-04-19 18:22 GMT) acknowledgments • xiii script. This book is better for their ideas. Sian Hunter, Beth Lassiter, Kate Torrey, Paula Wald, and countless others at the University of North Carolina Press have been incredibly patient with me, and I am grateful for their help and support in moving this manuscript to publication. Rebecca Sharpless read the manuscript carefully and helped to improve its argument and prose. Madeleine Glennon came through in the clutch and tracked down a last-­ minute citation. Members of the Brooklyn writing group have offered careful readings, excellent company, and delicious wine and...

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