User:Garbanzito/Phil goodstein

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Phil H. Goldstein, born 31 December 31, 1952, is a historian specializing in the social history of Denver and Colorado. He has published numerous books and articles on Denver history subjects, ranging from ghost stories to transportation politics to Jewish history. He has led historical tours of Denver[1] and he was the editor of a long-running newsletter on Denver topics, "The Nay Sayer".

Goodstein is a fourth-generation Coloradan, educated at Denver's East High School, Metro State College of Denver (now Metropolitan State University of Denver), the University of Denver and the University of Colorado.Cite error: There are <ref> tags on this page without content in them (see the help page).

Bibliography[edit]

  • The day the Army invaded Montgomery Ward (article), 1991
  • Convention City: when the Democrats came to Denver (article), 1984
  • Curtis Park, Five Points, and Beyond: The Heart of Historic East Denver. United States, New Social Publications, 2014.
  • Denver's Capitol Hill: one hundred years of life in a vibrant urban neighborhood, 1988
  • The Denver Civic Center: The Heart of the Mile High City. United States, New Social Publications, 2016.
  • Denver from the bottom up
    • vol. 1: from Sand Creek to Ludlow, 2003
    • vol. 2: Robert Speer's Denver 1904-1920: the mile high city in the progressive era
    • vol. 3(?): In the shadow of the Klan : when the KKK ruled Denver, 1920-1926. United States, New Social Publications, 2003.
    • vol. 4, a people's history of Colorado, From soup lines to the front lines: Denver during the Depression and World War II, 1927-1947
  • The Denver history index
  • Denver in our time: a people's history of the modern mile high city,
    • Vol. 1: Big Money in the City, 1999
    • Vol. 2: DIA and other scams, 2000
  • The Denver School Book: 1859-1967. United States, New Social Publications, 2019.
  • Denver streets: names, numbers, locations, logic, 1994
  • The Denver that is No More: The Story of the City's Demolished Landmarks. United States, New Social Publications, 2021.
  • Exploring Jewish Colorado, 1002
  • The ghosts of Denver: Capitol Hill, 1996
  • The Ghosts of University Park, Platt Park and Beyond, 2010
  • Grids of chaos: early Denver's baffling street system (article), 1994
  • The history of South Denver,
    • vol 1. (?), 2008
    • vol. 2: Phil Goodstein's haunted history of South Denver, the haunts of Washington Park
  • How the West Side Won: The History of West Denver, 2015
  • The Jews of Capitol Hill. United States, Rocky Mountain Jewish Historical Society, 1990.
  • The Lumber Baron Inn: Denver’s Mystery Mansion, 2013
  • Modern East Denver: Magnificient Mayfair, Beautiful Bellevue, Hale, Hilltop, and Hospitals. United States, New Social Publications, 2017.
  • Monumental Denver: a look at the city's significant public art (article), 1987
  • Murders in the bank vault: the Father's Day massacre and the trial of James King (as told by Walter L. Gerash), 1998
  • The Nay sayer (serial), ca. 1982-2016 [2]
  • Nevada Jane Haywood. United States, George Meany Center for Labor Studies, 1990.
  • North Side Story: Denver's Most Intriguing Neighborhood. United States, New Social Publications, 2011.
  • Park Hill Promise: The Quest for an Idyllic Denver Neighborhood. United States, New Social Publications, 2012.
  • A proposal for a socialist educational program. United States, n.p.
  • Resolution on Chile. United States, n.p.
  • The seamy side of Denver: tall tales of the Mile High City, 1993
  • South Denver saga, 1991
  • The theory of the general strike from the French Revolution to Poland. New York, East European Monographs, 1984.
  • Walter Cheesman's cow (article), 1996

[3]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Heinz, Eric. "The Spirit of Phil Goodstein Continues: Longtime Historian Says He Would Like Apprentice to Help with Tours – The Denver North Star".
  2. ^ "Denver Direct".
  3. ^ "The Denver history index / by Phil Goodstein. ; Cover title: Phil Goodstein's Denver history index". History Colorado. LucideaCore ARGUS.net.

External links[edit]