Background
Weber, Michael Paul was born on October 12, 1937 in Pittsburgh. Son of Paul M. and Estelle (Gross) Weber.
(Using quantitative as well as verbal data, this book exam...)
Using quantitative as well as verbal data, this book examines the social and geographic mobility of unskilled, semiskilled and skilled workers during the oil boom years of the 1870s and 1880s and the more stable 1890s and 1900s in an industrial town or northwestern Pennsylvania. Also analyzed are the differing rates of mobility or various ethnocultural groups living within the community.A hamlet in 1813, Warren was a lumber center briefly in the 1840s, then declined because of excessive logging, national depressions, and a disastrous downtown fire. After the first oil strike in 1875, Warren's population grew from 2,000 to 11,000 in just over three decades, having developed varied industries to replace sole reliance on timber or oil.Dr. Weber traces the origins of the people or Warren--whether native or foreign-born--and their movement, both geographical (including some departures from the community) and social (mostly upward but downward for some). He also considers the factors--public education, acquisition of skills, inheritance of property, and entrepreneurship--contributing to social movement.The book argues that social mobility was directly related to the industrial growth of the community, introducing extensive comparisons of other 19th century towns in support of this thesis. Comparisons also suggest that community size and structure influenced both mobility and labor conditions.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0271012013/?tag=2022091-20
university official history educator
Weber, Michael Paul was born on October 12, 1937 in Pittsburgh. Son of Paul M. and Estelle (Gross) Weber.
Bachelor of Science, Edinboro University Pennsylvania, 1959. Master of Education, Edinboro University Pennsylvania, 1964. Doctor of Arts, Carnegie-Mellon University, 1972.
Assistant professor urban history, Center Michigan U., Mount Pleasant, 1971-1972; professor, Carnegie-Mellon U., Pittsburgh, 1972-1986; director graduate studies, Carnegie-Mellon U., Pittsburgh, 1976-1986; professor urban history public policy, Duquesne U., Pittsburgh, since 1986; dean Graduate School Liberal Arts and Sciences, Duquesne U., Pittsburgh, 1986-1990; vice president for academic affairs, Duquesne U., Pittsburgh, since 1987.
(Using quantitative as well as verbal data, this book exam...)
Married Patricia Gurgurich, August 26, 1961. Children: Lisa Ann, Heidi Michelle.