@book{415, keywords = {Roman Catholics, American Civil War, physicians, Pennsylvania oil rush, Railroad Strike of 1877, railroad industry, ministers, Mellon Bank, Henry Clay Frick (1849-1919), Andrew Carnegie (1835-1919), labor strikes, immigrants, World War I, trade unions, World War II, Carnegie Steel Company, Stephen Foster (1826-64), William Wilkins (1779-1865), football, Ulysses S. Grant (1822-85), Pinkerton Detective National Agency, H. C. Frick Coke Company, Jones and Laughlin Steel Company, Gulf Oil Corporation, KDKA radio station, United Steelworkers, U. S. Steel Corporation, iron industry, steel industry, Homestead Steel Strike of 1892, Protestants, Jewish Americans, coal industry}, author = {Samuel A. [Agnew] Schreiner Jr.}, title = {Thine Is the Glory: A Novel of America's Golden Triangle}, abstract = {Scott Shallenberger Stewart rises from South Hills country boy to a Steel City industrialist equal to Andrew Carnegie, Henry Clay Frick, Andrew Mellon, and George Westinghouse.}, year = {1975}, pages = {476 p.}, publisher = {Arbor House}, address = {New York}, note = {
Settings are referred to by their historical names as follows: Carnegie Mellon University is Carnegie Tech; Chatham University is Pennsylvania College for Women; University of Pittsburgh is Western University of Pennsylvania; North Side is Allegheny City; and South Side is Birmingham. Pennsylvania Railroad Union Depot and Hotel is referred to as Union Depot. Bellefield Presbyterian Church is disguised as Oakland Presbyterian Church.
}, language = {English}, }