An English Translation and Annotation of Selected Writings of Joseph Déjacque by Janine C. Hartman, Professor of History, The University of Cincinnati with Introduction and Annotation by Mark A. Lause, Professor of History, The University of Cincinnati.
This article features several books in the University of Cincinnati Libraries' collection that were previously in Nazi and other World War Two related libraries and explains how UCL came to acquire them through the Cooperative Acquisitions Project sponsored by the Library of Congress after the war.
[New York City] The European, November 15, 1856-May 2, 1858, editor Hugh Forbes. Forbes, an English Garibaldian organized the emigres of 1848-49 in New York City with local radicals into a coalition of Universal Democratic Republicans. It became part of the International Association of the 1850s, and the foundation for the American sections of the International Workingmen's Association after the Civil War. Impressed by Forbes' war record coupled to his militant hostility to slavery, eastern abolitionists involved with John Brown recruited Forbes to be his military advisor. Convinced that the plan for Harpers Ferry was suicidal and unnecessary, Forbes left the operation. By 1860, he was back in Italy with Garibaldi, and, in his absence, became an easy figure to blame for the project's defeat.
Institute of Modern Russian Culture Newsletters 1979-2018. The newsletter is distributed biannually and provides information and events connected to the IMRC. The newsletter contains lists of books, journals, and catalogs related to the art and culture of Russia. It also lists events and exhibitions that took place during the year.
[New York] Bulletin de l'Union républicaine de langue française, November 15, 1869-September 9, 1871. The emigres of 1848-49 formed the core of support for the Bulletin, which became involved with the International Workingmen's Association. The gap towards the end of 1870 reflected the dislocations of the Franco-Prussian War and the French declaration of a republic, after which hundreds of French radicals in New York returned to France, at least for the duration of the war. The publication reappeared in 1872 as Le Socialiste.