TY - SER KW - Roman Catholics KW - American Civil War KW - physicians KW - Pennsylvania oil rush KW - Railroad Strike of 1877 KW - railroad industry KW - ministers KW - Mellon Bank KW - Henry Clay Frick (1849-1919) KW - Andrew Carnegie (1835-1919) KW - labor strikes KW - immigrants KW - World War I KW - trade unions KW - World War II KW - Carnegie Steel Company KW - Stephen Foster (1826-64) KW - William Wilkins (1779-1865) KW - football KW - Ulysses S. Grant (1822-85) KW - Pinkerton Detective National Agency KW - H. C. Frick Coke Company KW - Jones and Laughlin Steel Company KW - Gulf Oil Corporation KW - KDKA radio station KW - United Steelworkers KW - U. S. Steel Corporation KW - iron industry KW - steel industry KW - Homestead Steel Strike of 1892 KW - Protestants KW - Jewish Americans KW - coal industry AU - Samuel A. [Agnew] Schreiner Jr. AB - 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. C1 - 1860s-1940s C3 - Allegheny River; Monongahela River; Ohio River; Allegheny County; Pittsburgh; Downtown; Oliver Building; Frick Building; Monongahela House; Duquesne Club; Kaufmann’s department store; Pennsylvania Railroad Union Depot and Hotel; North Side; South Side; La C4 - Saga; Historical; Labor; War; Romance CY - New York LA - English M3 - Novel N1 -
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.
N2 - 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. PB - Arbor House PP - New York PY - 1975 RN - Samuel Schreiner (1921—2018), born in Mt. Lebanon, Allegheny County, graduated from Princeton in 1942 and served as a cryptographer in World War II. He began his writing career as a journalist in McKeesport, Allegheny County and Pittsburgh before moving to an editorial position at Reader's Digest. He published more than a dozen books of nonfiction and fiction. EP - 476 p. TI - Thine Is the Glory: A Novel of America's Golden Triangle ER -