City building on the eastern frontier : sorting the new nineteenth-century city

Author(s)

    • Shaw, Diane

Bibliographic Information

City building on the eastern frontier : sorting the new nineteenth-century city

by Diane Shaw

(Creating the North American landscape)

Johns Hopkins University Press, c2004

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

America's westward expansion involved more than pushing the frontier across the Mississippi toward the Pacific; it also consisted of urbanizing undeveloped regions of the colonial states. In 1810, New York's future governor DeWitt Clinton marveled that the "rage for erecting villages is a perfect mania." The development of Rochester and Syracuse illuminates the national experience of internal economic and cultural colonization during the first half of the nineteenth century. Architectural historian Diane Shaw examines the ways in which these new cities were shaped by a variety of constituents-founders, merchants, politicians, and settlers-as opportunities to extend the commercial and social benefits of the market economy and a merchant culture to America's interior. At the same time, she analyzes how these priorities resulted in a new approach to urban planning. According to Shaw, city founders and residents deliberately arranged urban space into three segmented districts-commercial, industrial, and civic-to promote a self-fulfilling vision of a profitable and urbane city. Shaw uncovers a distinctly new model of urbanization that challenges previous paradigms of the physical and social construction of nineteenth-century cities. Within two generations, the new cities of Rochester and Syracuse were sorted at multiple scales, including not only the functional definition of districts, but also the refinement of building types and styles, the stratification of building interiors by floor, and even the coding of public space by class, gender, and race. Shaw's groundbreaking model of early nineteenth-century urban design and spatial culture is a major contribution to the interdisciplinary study of the American city.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments Chapter 1. Vernacular Urbanism and the Mercantile Network of New Cities Chapter 2. Planning the Sorted City: Commercial, Industrial, and Civic Districts Chapter 3. Building the Sorted City: The Three Epitome Districts Chapter 4. Refining the Sorted City: Appearances in the Commercial District Chapter 5. Gentrifying the Sorted City: Social Sorting in the Commercial District Chapter 6. The Reynolds Arcade and Athenaeum Chapter 7. Transportation and the Changing Streetscape Notes Index

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