@book{209, keywords = {Roman Catholics, Edgar Thomson Works, Henry Clay Frick (1849-1919), Andrew Carnegie (1835-1919), trade unions, Irish Americans, Great Depression, The, Steel Strike of 1919, Bessemer process, American Federation of Labor (AFL), Congress of Industrial Organizations, Slovak Americans, Carpatho-Rusyn Americans, Byzantine Catholics, Carnegie Steel Company, Adalbert Kazincy (1871-1947), Pittsburgh Catholic Charities, John Francis Regis Canevin (1853-1927), Westinghouse Electric Corporation, Pinkerton Detective National Agency, United Steelworkers, U. S. Steel Corporation, steel industry, steel mills, Homestead Steel Strike of 1892, Black Americans, Protestants}, author = {Thomas Bell}, title = {Out of This Furnace}, abstract = {A semi-autobiographical family saga of three generations of an immigrant Slovak and Rusyn family—the Dobrejcaks—from 1881 to 1937 in the steel mills of Braddock and Homestead.}, year = {1941}, pages = {413 p.}, publisher = {Little, Brown, & Company}, address = {Boston}, note = {Settings are referred to by their historical names as follows: Carnegie Mellon University is Carnegie Technical Institute; Kennywood Park is Kenny's Grove. The novel arguably became the most memorable Pittsburgh Novel after 1976, when Professor David Demarest of Carnegie Mellon University and the University of Pittsburgh Press reissued this long out-of-print working-class novel.}, language = {English}, }