Forword by Tom Waseleski
Homestead Revisited
Editor's Foreword
Part I. The Mill and the Town
Chapter I. Homestead and the Great Strike
Chapter II. The Make-up of the Town
Part II. The English-Speaking Households
Chapter III. Work, Wages, and the Cost of Living
Chapter IV. Rent in the Household Budget
Chapter V. Table and Dinner Pail
Chapter VI. Other Expenditures: The Budget as a Whole
Chapter VII. Of Human Relationships
Chapter VIII. The Children of Homestead
Part III. The Slav as a Homesteader
Chapter IX. The Slavs
Chapter X. Life at $1.65 a Day
Chapter XI. Family Life of the Slavs
Chapter XII. The Slav Organized
Part IV. The Mill and the Household
Chapter XIII. The Mill and the Household
Appendices
I. Methods of Budget Study
II. Tables giving general description and average weekly expenditure of each of the 90 budget families
III. Employees in Homestead Plant of the United States Steel Corporation classified according to skill, citizenship, conjugal condition, etc., Mar. 1, 1907
IV. Classification and Earnings of Employees in Three Representative Steel Plants in the Pittsburgh District
V. An Act to Enable Borough Councils to Establish Boards of Health. State of Pennsylvania. 1893
VI. Report of the Board of Health of the Borough of Homestead for the year ending December 31, 1908
VII. Record of Casualties on Unprotected Grade Crossings, Homestead, 1905-1907
VIII. Seven-Day Labor
IX. Cost of Living in Pittsburgh
X. Ratings on Men Employed in Iron and Steel Industry, Prudential Insurance Company of America
XI. Carnegie Relief Fund
XII. Accident Relief Plan of the United States Steel Corporation
XIII. The Carnegie Library, Homestead
XIV. Slavic Organizations in Homestead
XV. Population of Homestead and Munhall
Index