Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 230
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-8420-2993-3 • Paperback • August 2002 • $49.00 • (£38.00)
Roger Biles is professor of history at East Carolina University.
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 Jermiah Dummer: From Puritan Son to Worldly Gentleman
Chapter 3 Andrew Jackson Downing: Promoter of City Parks and Suburbs
Chapter 4 Alexander R. Shepherd: The Haussmannization of Washington, DC
Chapter 5 Frank Julian Sprague: The Father of Electric Urban Mass Transit in the United States
Chapter 6 Charles A. Comiskey: Baseball as American Pastime and Tragedy
Chapter 7 Lillian Wald: Meeting the Needs of Neighborhoods, 1893-1933
Chapter 8 Billy Sunday: Urban Prophet of Hope
Chapter 9 Albion Fellows Bacon: Indiana's Frenzied Philanthropist
Chapter 10 Catherine Bauer: The Struggle for Modern Housing in America, 1930-1960
Chapter 11 Robert Moses: Relentless Progressive
Chapter 12 Coleman A. Young: Race and the Reshaping of Postwar Urban Politics
Chapter 13 Elizabeth Virrick: The "Concrete Monsters" and Housing Reform in Postwar Miami
Chapter 14 Index
A nice introduction to the problems and concerns facing different groups of urban Americans at different points in time.
— Amy S. Greenberg, Penn State University
A dynamic and captivating volume. The diverse and important individuals who populate the chapters of The Human Tradition in Urban America will make urban history courses come alive. Skillfully edited by Roger Biles, this innovative book will prove itself enticing.
— Michael H. Ebner, Lake Forest College
A splendid addition to the Human Tradition series that utilizes biography to reflect urban history and urban change.
— Melvin G. Holli, professor of history at the University of Illinois at Chicago, author of The American Mayor
Cities are more than buildings and infrastructures; they are also people. This delightful and informative collection of brief biographical sketches illuminates the variety of the urban experience. Professor Biles presents the stories of innovators—some familiar, but many newly introduced to most readers—who used the urban experience as a catalyst for new ideas. We are all richer for who they were and what they did.
— Perry Duis, University of Ilinois at Chicago
An intellectually compelling collection of biographies of urbanites. . . . These essays are accessible to undergraduates, yet grapple with hotly debated issues.
— Choice Reviews