Author: United States. Department of the InteriorPublish On: 1867
United States. Department of the Interior. Title . Vol . No. Page . 11 92 11 93 11 98 11 99 11 11 100 114 7 30 5 4 1 5 4 1 5 4 31 36 38 44 65 Treasury , transmitting report of James W. Taylor , special commissioner for the collection of ...
Author: United States. Department of the InteriorPublish On: 1952
United States. Department of the Interior. CARIBBEAN TERRITORIES Commonwealth of Puerto Rico Achievement of internal self - government . - On January 19 , 1953 , the Honorable Henry Cabot Lodge , the United States Ambassador to the ...
Author: United States. Dept. of the InteriorPublish On: 1944
OF THE Annual REPORT DEPARTMENT INTERIOR of the Governor of the Virgin Islands to the Secretary of the Interior for the Fiscal Year Ended June 30 1944 ! United States Department of the Interior HAROLD L. ICKES.
Annual reports subsequent to 1929 are included with the Annual Report of the Department of the Interior . REPORTS OF SPECIAL OR GENERAL INTEREST Water Resources Paper No . 2 . - Report on Bow River Power and Storage Investigations Bow ...
Author: United States. Department of the InteriorPublish On: 1863
United States. Department of the Interior. 14 E. SURVEYOR General's OFFICE , Leavenworth , Kansas , September 21 , 1863 . SIR : In pursuance of your instructions of May 4 last , I herewith submit my annual report , showing the condition ...
Dept., NA. 12. Leonard White, The Republican Era: A Study in Administrative History (New York, 1958), chs. 6, 9, 10; U.S., Department of the Interior, Annual Report of the Secretary of the Interior, 1863, p. ix; U.S., Department of the ...
Author: Cindy Sondik Aron
Publisher: Oxford University Press
ISBN: 0195364317
Category: History
Page: 249
View: 583
Drawing from workers' applications, testimonies, and other primary documents, Ladies and Gentlemen of the Civil Service recreates the white-collar world of middle-class workers from the Civil War to 1900. It reveals how men who worked in federal agencies moved from being self-employed to salaried workers, in the process placing at risk the independence that lay at the core of middle-class male values; while women assumed the kind of independence that threatened their positions as delicate, middle-class ladies deserving the protection and care of men. Introducing a cast of characters who worked as federal clerks in Washington, Arons examines the nature of being a civil servant--from the hiring, firing, and promotion procedures, the motivations for joining the federal workforce, and the impact of feminization on the workplace to the interpersonal aspects of office life such as attitude towards sex, manners, and money-lending--and provides an imaginative look at what it meant to be among the ladies and gentlemen who formed part of the first white-collar bureaucracy in the United States.