While rich in natural resources, Appalachia remains a nationwide symbol
of poverty. Ken Fones-Wolf deftly combines labor and business history to
examine how a promising partnership between West Virginia and the glass
industry failed to improve the state's political economy.
State leaders saw glass as a potential cornerstone industry that
promised high wages, reinvestment in the local economy, and a complement
to the state's abundance of timber and fossil fuels. Fones-Wolf draws on
case studies of three glass production hubs to analyze the impact of
industry on local populations and the Belgian- and French-born craftsmen
who took jobs in the area. Throughout, Fones-Wolf examines patterns of
global industrial restructuring, the ways workers reshaped workplace
culture and political action, and employer strategies for responding to
global competition, unreliable markets, and growing labor costs at the
end of the nineteenth century.
Incisive and rich in on-the-ground detail, Glass Towns examines an
Appalachian pursuit of self-sustaining development.