How One Mohawk Ironworker Built the New York Skyline Without a Harness
Автор: Native American History Stories
Загружено: 2025-11-03
Просмотров: 2845
He was Mohawk from Kahnawake, twenty-seven years old, nicknamed “Eagle” by men who watched him thread space like a seamstress through cloth. He wore what everyone called the ironworker’s uniform: flannel shirt rolled to the elbow, suspenders eating into his shoulders, wool trousers pinned up to his knees, hobnailed boots whose soles had memorized the steel. A leather belt hung from his hip with a spud wrench and a rivet hammer clinking against it. No harness. Not today, not ever if Eli had anything to say about it.
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