In Hamilton in the early twentieth century, workers and their families could and did attend churches that were predominantly working class. These churches were simple and modest, were managed and financially sustained by their working-class congregations, offered an old-fashioned evangelical message on Sunday mornings, and provided a rich and diverse associational life. While these churches attracted working-class families, gender and marital status influenced individuals' participation. Church members were more likely to be women than men, and married rather than single. Many families also had irregular contact with the church; parents who were not church members, for example, often chose to baptize their children and send them to Sunday S...
St. Mary's Anglican church was located in the working-class West End of St John's, Newfoundland, and...
This study draws on a 5-per-cent national sample of the nominal level census returns for Canada in 1...
Harismendy Patrick. McLeod (Hugh). Piety and Poverty. Working-Class Religion in Berlin, London and N...
St. Luke's Anglican Church came into being in Hamilton's north-end in the summer of 1882, as Hamilto...
Recent studies indicate that records of church membership are unreliable as a barometer to measure t...
Increasing social and spatial segregation along class lines in nineteenth-century Montreal brought a...
This paper examines clergymen’s response to labour issues in early-twentieth-century Hamilton, Ontar...
When P. W. Philpott left the Salvation Army and founded the Christian Workers’ Church in 1892, he wa...
The central piece of evidence regarding the religious character of the population in the mid-Ninetee...
This thesis examines the relationship between denominational affiliation, class and gender in the c...
This thesis examines the relationship between denominational affiliation, class and gender in the ci...
Abstract:MaxWeber’s ethos of work was not an integral part of the pre-industrial cul-ture of Ontario...
Christianity is an integral aspect of Native history, not simply an external force acting upon it. N...
This paper examines the work of Rev. Peter Bryce in establishing a progressive “institutional church...
In their analysis of the impact of nineteenth-century market forces upon the lives of women, histori...
St. Mary's Anglican church was located in the working-class West End of St John's, Newfoundland, and...
This study draws on a 5-per-cent national sample of the nominal level census returns for Canada in 1...
Harismendy Patrick. McLeod (Hugh). Piety and Poverty. Working-Class Religion in Berlin, London and N...
St. Luke's Anglican Church came into being in Hamilton's north-end in the summer of 1882, as Hamilto...
Recent studies indicate that records of church membership are unreliable as a barometer to measure t...
Increasing social and spatial segregation along class lines in nineteenth-century Montreal brought a...
This paper examines clergymen’s response to labour issues in early-twentieth-century Hamilton, Ontar...
When P. W. Philpott left the Salvation Army and founded the Christian Workers’ Church in 1892, he wa...
The central piece of evidence regarding the religious character of the population in the mid-Ninetee...
This thesis examines the relationship between denominational affiliation, class and gender in the c...
This thesis examines the relationship between denominational affiliation, class and gender in the ci...
Abstract:MaxWeber’s ethos of work was not an integral part of the pre-industrial cul-ture of Ontario...
Christianity is an integral aspect of Native history, not simply an external force acting upon it. N...
This paper examines the work of Rev. Peter Bryce in establishing a progressive “institutional church...
In their analysis of the impact of nineteenth-century market forces upon the lives of women, histori...
St. Mary's Anglican church was located in the working-class West End of St John's, Newfoundland, and...
This study draws on a 5-per-cent national sample of the nominal level census returns for Canada in 1...
Harismendy Patrick. McLeod (Hugh). Piety and Poverty. Working-Class Religion in Berlin, London and N...