For other uses, see Jungle (disambiguation). The Jungle is a 1906 novel by the American journalist and novelist Upton Sinclair (1878–1968). Sinclair wrote the novel to portray the harsh conditions and exploited lives of immigrants in the United States in Chicago and similar industrialized cities.

How to make a name generator for a jungle?

This name generator will give you 10 names fit for jungles and rain forests. Jungles come in many different shapes and sizes, but they do share similar elements. The same often goes for their names. In this generator the names have been divided into two types.

Who are some famous paper makers in Wales?

42 Samuel Adams Upper Mill Halghton, Hanmer, Flintshire 43 Benjamin Bates Sarn Worthenbury, Flintshire 45 John Lewis Buckley Buckley, Flintshire 440 James Window Llangenni Llangenni, Brecknockshire 441 William Spencer Pandy Cadle, Llangyfelach,Glamorgan 442 Thomas Rowland Monks Mill Llandilo Tal-y-bont, Glamorgan WALES NORTH COLLECTION

When did Sinclair publish his book The Jungle?

Sinclair published the book in serial form between February 25, 1905, and November 4, 1905, in Appeal to Reason, the socialist newspaper that had supported Sinclair’s undercover investigation the previous year.

42 Samuel Adams Upper Mill Halghton, Hanmer, Flintshire 43 Benjamin Bates Sarn Worthenbury, Flintshire 45 John Lewis Buckley Buckley, Flintshire 440 James Window Llangenni Llangenni, Brecknockshire 441 William Spencer Pandy Cadle, Llangyfelach,Glamorgan 442 Thomas Rowland Monks Mill Llandilo Tal-y-bont, Glamorgan WALES NORTH COLLECTION

Who was the first paper maker in England?

JOHN Tate, a ‘citizen and mercer of London’, is considered to be England’s first paper-maker. Paper made at his mill in Hertfordshire was used by Wynkyn de Worde to print an English edition of Anglicus Bartholomaeus’ book De Proprietatibus Rerum in 1495.

What was the name of the paper mill?

The paper-mill belonged to a family which included the corn-mill, the fullingmill, the slitting mill, and others less plentifully represented in the English countryside before the Industrial Revolution.