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We Are All Connecticut Yankees:
Diversity in the 19th and Early 20th Century
 

Suggestions for further reading

Baxter, Linda Trowbridge. The Newcomers: A Study of Immigrants to Guilford, Connecticut, 1850-1930. Dexter, MI: Thomson-shore Inc., 1985.

Beardsley, Thomas and Shuldiner, David (eds.). Connecticut Speaks for Itself: Firsthand Accounts of Life in the Nutmeg State from Colonial Times to the Present Day. Connecticut Humanities Council, 1996.

Cunningham, Janice P. and Ranson, David F., Back to the Land: Jewish Farms and Resorts in Connecticut, 1930-1945. Connecticut Historical Commission and Jewish Historical Society of Greater Hartford, 1998.

Glaser, Ruth. Aqui Me Quedo: Puerto Ricans in Connecticut, Connecticut Historical Commission, 1997.

Horton, James Oliver and Horton, Lois E., In Hope of Liberty: Culture, Community and Protest Among Northern Free Blacks, 1700-1860. Oxford University Press, 1997.

Koenig, Samuel, Immigrant Settlements in Connecticut: Growth and Characteristics. Hartford, 1983.

Silverman, Morris. Hartford Jews, 1659-1970. Hartford, The Connecticut Historical Society, 1970.

Wiliams, Mark. “A World Apart: Connecticut’s African-Americans, 1914-1970.” Part of the Connecticut Case Studies Series. Connecticut Humanities Council.

Williams, Mark. “Newcomers to the Land of Steady Habits.” Part of the Connecticut Case Studies Series. Connecticut Humanities Council.

Link to other essays in this Journey:

>> Introduction: We are All Connecticut Yankees
>>
Celebrating Ethnic Origins
>>
Becoming Americans
>> Diversity In The Workplace
>> Immigrant Entrepreneurs

>> Guideposts