Learn History Through Fiction: Armour Meat’s Union-Busting History

A 1911 study of Armour Meats in Chicago (five years after Upton Sinclair’s exposé The Jungle was published) found that the average weekly pay for 10 hours a day, six days a week, was $9.50, whereas the living wage for a family of five, the average size at the time, was $15.40. But Armour swore it would pay whatever it wanted or close its factory doors. Armour successfully broke three strikes and blacklisted union leaders. Read more Chicago and labor history in Tazia and Gemma (see NOVELS).

Armour Meats in Chicago’s stockyards used its power to bust labor unions
Meat-packers were still overworked and underpaid years after The Jungle was published
Tazia and Gemma (Vine Leaves Press) by Ann S. Epstein

Learn History Through Fiction: Raise a Pint to the Pub

Pubs are a British mainstay, analogous to American bars. What Americans might call their neighborhood bar is known in the UK as the “local.” The term “public house” was first used in the 17th century; the landlord or manager was dubbed a publican. Pubs are licensed to serve “beer, wine, and spirits” and serve classic food, such as fish and chips, pickled eggs, pork scratchings (pork rind), and ploughboy’s lunch (a sandwich of buttered bread, cheese, ham, pickle, and onion. Read more about old London in A Brain. A Heart. The Nerve. (see NOVELS).

Pints, pickled eggs, and ploughboy’s lunch at the pub
A Brain. A Heart. The Nerve. (Alternative Book Press) by Ann S. Epstein

Learn History Through Fiction: NYC’s First Italian Neighborhood

The first New York City neighborhood settled by large numbers of Italian immigrants, most of them from Southern Italy and Sicily, was in East Harlem, which became known as Little Italy. Its population peaked in 1930. Italians also settled in or moved to the outer boroughs. In the early 1900s, Bensonhurst, considered the Little Italy of Brooklyn, was equally divided between Jews and Italians. Read more about a young Italian immigrant who first lived in Brooklyn 100 years ago in Tazia and Gemma (see NOVELS).

New York’s Little Italy in East Harlem bustled 100 years ago
Tazia and Gemma (Vine Leaves Press) by Ann S. Epstein

Learn History Through Fiction: The Ten Percent Club

(Posted on the 75th anniversary of D-Day) Those not serving in the Armed Forces during WWII supported the war on the home front. Most workers bought War Bonds using automatic payroll deductions. They were encouraged to invest at least 10% of their earnings. Factories were given a “Minuteman” flag if 100% of the workers joined the “Ten Percent Club.” Hollywood celebrities also appeared at War Bond drives, urging civilians to do their share. Read more about WWII and life on the home front in A Brain. A Heart. The Nerve. (see NOVELS).

The drive to buy War Bonds during WWII used patriotic persuasion and threats
A Brain. A Heart. The Nerve. (Alternative Book Press) by Ann S. Epstein

Learn History Through Fiction: Heftiest Dry Docks in History

(Posted on the 75th anniversary of D-Day) During WWII, the San Diego Naval Base converted, overhauled, maintained, and repaired more than 5,117 battle-damaged U.S. ships. Central to this work was the construction of 155 floating dry docks — some weighing as much as 3,000 tons — to deploy onsite or deliver to other bases. Read more San Diego and Navy history in Tazia and Gemma (see NOVELS).

San Diego Naval Base repaired over 5,100 damaged U.S. battle ships during WWII
Tazia and Gemma (Vine Leaves Press) by Ann S. Epstein

Learn History Through Fiction: Women’s Suffrage Squeaks Through Congress

The U.S. Congress passed the 19th Amendment recognizing women’s right to vote 100 years ago today, June 4, 1919. At 56-25, it barely reached the two-thirds majority necessary. The Amendment was ratified on August 19, 1920. The battle for women’s suffrage actually began nearly a century earlier, when women played a prominent role in other reform groups including the abolitionist movement and temperance leagues. However, it was not until the Seneca Falls (New York) Convention of 1848 that women began to organize for the vote. The push for women’s suffrage took a back seat during the Civil War, and split when leading advocates for women’s rights opposed granting those same rights to blacks in the 15th Amendment. But the movement revived in the early 1900s, beginning at the state level and eventually gaining national momentum, aided by the role women played in WWI. Read more about the fight for women’s suffrage in On the Shore (see NOVELS).

The fight for women’s suffrage was a century-long battle
On the Shore (Vine Leaves Press) by Ann S. Epstein

Learn History Through Fiction: San Diego’s 1948 Grant Hotel Sit-In

In 1948, San Diego was the site of the Grant Hotel sit-in to protest racism. The rapid growth of blacks in San Diego during WW II paved way for an expanded NAACP branch. Humiliated and angered at being refused a snack at a downtown “greasy spoon,” the NAACP’s president, a dentist, recruited a group of black and white students at San Diego State College, rehearsed them to act as customers and witnesses, then targeted white-owned restaurants that discriminated. As the black students were denied service, already seated white students who were on their side observed and later testified in court. The NAACP filed and won 31 of its 32 lawsuits, usually with court awards to plaintiffs of $300 per case, which the students split with their attorney. The ultimate triumph was desegregation of the Grant Grill at the prestigious U.S. Grant Hotel in downtown San Diego. Read more San Diego and desegregation history in Tazia and Gemma (see NOVELS).

Student sit-ins protest racism at restaurants
San Diego’s prestigious Grant Hotel Grill ordered to serve blacks
Tazia and Gemma (Vine Leaves Press) by Ann S. Epstein

Learn History Through Fiction: Creating the Wizard of Oz Twister

As a real and deadly tornado hit Kansas yesterday (05/28/19), consider how the fake one in The Wizard of Oz was created. Jack Gillespie’s special effects team wrapped a 35-foot-long muslin stocking around a conical frame of chicken wire. The base of the tornado was fastened to a car, which traveled below the sound stage, propelled by a gantry crane rotated by a motor. Wind machines and dust completed the stormy picture. When the Weather Channel produced a miniseries about the 100 most memorable weather events in history, The Wizard of Oz tornado ranked #55. Read more about the making of the movie in A Brain. A Heart. The Nerve. (see NOVELS).

Dorothy Gale gets caught in the storm in The Wizard of Oz
The “twister” was a muslin stocking wrapped around chicken wire
A Brain. A Heart. The Nerve. (Alternative Book Press) by Ann S. Epstein

Learn History Through Fiction: Origin of the Classy and Classless Shirtwaist

The “shirtwaist” manufactured at the Triangle Waist Company, site of the tragic 1911 fire that killed 146 workers, was a woman’s blouse with puffed sleeves and a tapered waist. The ready-made garment was the first fashion to cross class lines because it was affordable for working women. Worn with an ankle-length skirt, the shirtwaist was appropriate for work and play, and soon replaced less comfortable and impractical corsets and hoops. Read about the seamstresses who sewed the original Triangle shirtwaists in Tazia and Gemma (see NOVELS).

The affordable shirtwaist blouse freed women from corsets
Seamstresses at Triangle Waist Company worked 12 hours a day, 6 days a week
Tazia and Gemma (Vine Leaves Press) by Ann S. Epstein

Learn History Through Fiction: Oz’s Wicked Witch a Kindergarten Teacher

Before Margaret Hamilton played Elvira Gulch and the Wicked Witch of the West in the 1939 Hollywood classic The Wizard of Oz, she was a kindergarten teacher and acted in children’s theater. She got the part when another actress refused to wear makeup that would cause her to appear ugly. Hamilton worried about the effect that her monstrous film role had on children because, in real life, she loved them and gave to charitable organizations benefitting them. Read more about the movie and Margaret Hamilton in A Brain. A Heart. The Nerve. (see NOVELS).

Actress Margaret Hamilton, Wicked Witch of the West, was willing to look ugly in makeup
In real life, Margaret Hamilton was also a kindergarten teacher and loved children
A Brain. A Heart. A Nerve. (Alternative Book Press) by Ann S. Epstein