Chicagoland: City and Suburbs in the Railroad Age

Paperback Published on: 11/11/2005
Price: £24.00
UK delivery included
Not available
This product is currently unavailable
Make and edit your lists in your account
wordery
has a fantastic rating on
Not available
This product is currently unavailable
wordery
has a fantastic rating on

Synopsis

Formed by images of crowded city streets and towering skyscrapers, our understanding of nineteenth-century Chicago completely neglects the fact that the city itself was only the center of a web of neighborhoods, farm communities, and industrial towns-many connected to the city by the railroad. Farmers used trains to transport produce into the city daily; businessmen rode the rails home to their commuter suburbs; and families took vacations mere miles outside the Loop. Historian and coeditor of the acclaimed *Encyclopedia of Chicago,* Ann Durkin Keating resurrects for us here the bustling network that defined greater Chicagoland. Taking a new approach to the history of the city, Keating shifts the focus to the landscapes and built environments of the metropolitan region. Organized by four categories of settlements-farm centers, industrial towns, commuter suburbs, and recreational and institutional centers-that framed the city, *Chicagoland* offers the collective history of 230 neighborhoods and communities, the people who built them, and the structures they left behind that still stand today. Keating reanimates nineteenth-century *Chicagoland* with more than a hundred photographs and maps; we find here the taverns, depots, and way stations that were the hubs of the region's vibrant, mobile life. Keating also includes an appendix of driving tours so readers can see this history for themselves. *Chicagoland* takes us into the buildings and sites that are still part of our landscape and repopulates them with the stories and characters behind their creation. The result is a wide-angle historical view of Chicago, an entirely new way to understand the region.

Publisher information

  • Publisher: University of Chicago Press
  • ISBN: 9780226428826
  • Number of pages: 296
  • Dimensions: 23 x 22 x 2 mm
  • Weight: 652g
  • Languages: English