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Topic: Liberty (1881-1908)


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 Liberty (disambiguation) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Liberty, a periodical published from 1881 - 1908 by Benjamin Tucker.
Liberty is the name of a number of places in the United States.
Liberty, a minor 1980s pop group that challenged Liberty X (originally also called Liberty) over the name.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Liberty_(disambiguation)   (275 words)

  
 Liberty (magazine) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Liberty, a political magazine published from 1881 to 1908 by Benjamin Tucker;
Liberty, a political magazine published from 1987 to date by R.
Liberty, a general-interest magazine published from 1924 to 1950;
www.wikipedia.org /wiki/Liberty_%28magazine%29   (111 words)

  
 Liberty (disambiguation) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Liberty, a periodical published from 1881 - 1908 by Benjamin Tucker.
Liberty is the name of a number of places in the United States.
Liberty, a minor 1980s pop group that challenged Liberty X (originally also called Liberty) over the name.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Liberty_(disambiguation)   (274 words)

  
 The Ultimate Liberty (disambiguation) Dog Breeds Information Guide and Reference
Liberty, a magazine published from 1881 - 1908 by Benjamin Tucker.
Liberty, a minor 1980s pop group that challenged Liberty X (originally also called Liberty) over the name.
Places: Liberty is the name of a number of places in the United States.
www.dogluvers.com /dog_breeds/Liberty_(disambiguation)   (274 words)

  
 Benjamin Tucker, Liberty, and Individualist Anarchism, Part One
The American periodical Liberty, edited and published by Tucker from August 1881 to April 1908, is widely considered to be the finest individualist-anarchist periodical ever issued in the English language.
Formerly the price of Liberty was eternal vigilance, but now it can be had for fifty cents a year."(2) So wrote Benjamin Ricketson Tucker (1854-1939) on the first page of the first issue of Liberty.(3)(4)
Over its twenty-seven year life span, during which it issued first from Boston and then from New York (1892), Liberty chronicled the personalities and the shifting controver- sies of radical individualism in the United States and abroad.
www.zetetics.com /mac/tir1.htm   (3052 words)

  
 market_anarchism
Frank H. Brooks (ed)- The Individualist Anarchists: An Anthology of Liberty (1881-1908)
Barry Macleod-Cullinane - The Right to Revolution: Toleration, Liberty and the State in the Thought of John Locke and the Early Liberals,
James J. Martin - Men Against the State: The Expositors of Individualist Anarchism in America, 1827-1908
www.againstpolitics.com /market_anarchism   (3075 words)

  
 Amazon.ca: Books: Liberty, 1881-1908: A Comprehensive Index
Look for books like Liberty, 1881-1908: A Comprehensive Index by subject:
Top of Page : Liberty, 1881-1908: A Comprehensive Index
If you would like to purchase this title, we recommend that you occasionally check this page to see if it has become available.
www.amazon.ca /exec/obidos/ASIN/096025742X   (3075 words)

  
 Benjamin Tucker, Liberty, and Individualist Anarchism, Part One
The American periodical Liberty, edited and published by Tucker from August 1881 to April 1908, is widely considered to be the finest individualist-anarchist periodical ever issued in the English language.
Tucker's Instead of a Book by a Man too Busy to Write One (1893 and Individual Liberty Clarence Lee Swartz (ed.) 1926.
The egoists argued that they were merely reducing the concept of rights to its proper place as an artificial, useful construct with which to organize society.
www.zetetics.com /mac/tir1.htm   (3052 words)

  
 AddALL.com - browse and compare book price: Wendy McElroy
Debates of Liberty: An Overview of Individualist Anarchism, 1881-1908
Liberty for Women: Freedom and Feminism in the Twenty-First Century
Individualist Feminism of the Nineteenth Century: Collected Writings and Biographical Profiles
www.addall.com /author/2106394-1   (265 words)

  
 Amazon.com: Books: The Individualist Anarchists: An Anthology of Liberty (1881-1908)
The Individualist Anarchists: An Anthology of Liberty (1881-1908) (Hardcover)
Amazon.com: Books: The Individualist Anarchists: An Anthology of Liberty (1881-1908)
Anarchists in this volume emerge as political freethinkers, people of a courageous honesty who debate and exchange powerful ideas on the topics concerning social beings.
www.amazon.com /exec/obidos/ASIN/1560001321   (431 words)

  
 World War I Collections
Included are Wisconsin membership lists, minutes of meetings, and reports, but the major portion consists of correspondence with the national office of the League, with local chairman, and with the Council of Defense, the Woman's Liberty Loan Committee, War Savings Committee, and other state groups with which the League cooperated.
Included are military service certificates of the donor's father, Captain Joseph (or Jozef) Zawodny (1881-1942), an officer of Company K, who came to the United States from Gniezno, Poland.
Papers of a Milwaukee lawyer and member of the Common Council (1908-1910) and State Assembly (1910-1912).
www.uwm.edu /Library/arch/ww1.htm   (3698 words)

  
 Julian Eltinge - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Julian Eltinge (born May 14, 1881; died March 7, 1941), born William Julian Dalton, was an American stage and screen actor and female impersonator.
In 1911, Eltinge opened one of his most famous shows, The Fascinating Widow at New York's Liberty Theater.
From 1908 to 1909 Eltinge toured with Cohan and Harris Minstrels.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Julian_Eltinge   (1496 words)

  
 Robert Peary - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Peary was born in Cresson, Pennsylvania and was commissioned a Lieutenant in the United States Navy 26 October 1881.
For his final assault on the North Pole, Peary set off from New York City, aboard the Roosevelt, under the command of Captain Robert Bartlett, with 23 men on July 6, 1908 and wintered near Cape Sheridan on Ellesmere Island.
The Liberty ship SS Robert E. Peary and the destroyer USS Peary (DD-226) were named for him.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Robert_Peary   (814 words)

  
 S
born 23 Jun 1881; lived at Altoona; farmer; white; nearest relative: Mrs.
born 7 Mar 1884; lived at Liberty; farmer; white; nearest relative: Susie May Shelton
born 21 May 1885; lived at Cleveland; farmer; white; nearest relative: Sallie Sweat [Rinaldo Green Sweat married Sallie Henderson 6 Dec 1908, Blount County]
home.hiwaay.net /~bobwonda/files/miscellaneous/wwi/s.htm   (7129 words)

  
 New Liberty Cemetery
Homer Evans Evans Cyntha Nov 21,1881 Mar 15,1928 Wife of Joseph Evans Evans Richard A. Jun 1, 1853 Feb 4, 1935 Hus.
of harry and Viva Evans Evans Cordelia Aug 7, 1891 Dec 7, 1908 Dau.
Evans Fannie E. Nov 28,1856 Mar 13,1920 Wife of Richard A. Evans Evans Junior (Inf) Aug 19,1931 Aug 19,1931 Infant son of Mr.
www.usgennet.org /usa/ar/county/greene/newlibcem.htm   (7129 words)

  
 Wendy McElroy -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article
Debates of Liberty: An Overview of Individualist Anarchism, 1881-1908, February 1, 2003 ISBN 073910473X
Individualist Feminists are considered anti-feminist by some feminists, and Wendy McElroy is well known for her opposition to some aspects of the feminist movement.
From the perspective of mainstream and radical feminists her positions are more reflective of anti-feminist values than feminist ones, and her positions on anarchism are more generally considered to be those of an (additional info and facts about anarcho-capitalist) anarcho-capitalist rather than than an individualist.
www.absoluteastronomy.com /encyclopedia/w/we/wendy_mcelroy1.htm   (387 words)

  
 Benjamin Tucker -- Anarchy Archives
An individualist Anarchist, Tucker (1854Ð1939) was a person of intellect rather than of action, focusing on the development of his ideas and on the publication of books and journals, especially the journal Liberty: Not the Daughter but the Mother of Order (1881Ð1908).
Introduced to Anarchism, labor reform, and free love by Ezra Heywood in Massachusetts, Tucker was also particularly influenced by Josiah Warren.
dwardmac.pitzer.edu /Anarchist_Archives/bright/tucker/biography.html   (387 words)

  
 PozA - Pokret za Anarhiju - Anarhisti - Josiah Warren
The strain of individualist anarchism that Warren initiated found a number of exponents in America throughout the nineteenth century / among them William B. Greene, an advocate of mutual banking, Stephen Pearl Andrews, a disciple of Warren, and Benjamin Tucker, who from 1881 to 1908 published an anarchist newspaper called Liberty.
Warren's Time Store in many ways anticipated the mutual bank that Proudhon tried to establish in 1849, an institution designed to provide for the exchange of products among the workers by means of labor checks.
Warren himself left the colony in 1863, and even within his lifetime it lost much of its unique character and began to settle into more conventional patterns.
www.anarchy-movement.org /anarchist.php?ID=61   (4506 words)

  
 glassfm.htm
Richard, married, February 6, 1884, Gwen Davis, daughter of Reese and Mary Davis, natives of Wales, who came to the United States later in life, he dying in Glassport, Pennsylvania, in 1908, and she in Dravosburg, Pennsylvania, in 1881.
The home place now lies for the greater part in Liberty borough, which has only recently been separated from Portvue.
Pennsylvania has not remained without its full share of those bearing the name of Phillips, but the exact date of their coming is not known, nor where they first located.
ivory.lm.com /~urichard/glassfm.htm   (13401 words)

  
 Anarchy Archives
The Individual Anarchists: An anthology of Liberty (1881-1908).
Anderson, C. All-American anarchist: Joseph A. Labadie and the labor movement.
Dulles, J.W. Anarchists and Communists in Brazil, 1900-1935.
dwardmac.pitzer.edu /anarchist_archives/unifiedbiblio.html   (13401 words)

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