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Awards
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: William CrononPublisher: WW Norton & Co Imprint: WW Norton & Co Edition: New edition Dimensions: Width: 15.50cm , Height: 4.10cm , Length: 23.60cm Weight: 2.073kg ISBN: 9780393308730ISBN 10: 0393308731 Pages: 592 Publication Date: 12 August 1992 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In stock We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAn intoxicating piece of scholarship and enterprise. . . . It is really a work of biography: a look at the life of Chicago.--David Shribman An intoxicating piece of scholarship and enterprise. . . . It is really a work of biography: a look at the life of Chicago. -- David Shribman An intoxicating piece of scholarship and enterprise. . . . It is really a work of biography: a look at the life of Chicago. --David Shribman """Thoroughly original... Illuminating... Brilliant."" -- Donald L. Miller - New York Times Book Review ""No one has ever written a better book about a city... No one has written about Chicago with more power, clarity and intelligence than Cronon."" -- Kenneth T. Jackson - Boston Globe ""An intoxicating piece of scholarship and enterprise... It is really a work of biography: a look at the life of Chicago."" -- David Shribman - Wall Street Journal" A meticulous, weighty study of the interrelationship of Chicago and the western frontier during the last half of the 19th century, told in terms of what Cronon (History/ Yale; Changes in the Land, 1983) calls the commodity flows of grain, lumber, and meat. The history of the Great West, Cronon writes, is a long dialogue between the place we call city and the place we call country. By following the development and transport needs of the grain, meat, and lumber industries, he shows that the growth of Chicago had as much to do with eastern business interests as it did with any notions of pioneer spirit. Chicago became a junction of Eastern means and Western opportunities. When the Illinois and Michigan Canal opened in 1848, it was an attempt to improve on the already marginal waterways of the Chicago River and the Great Lakes. By 1852, more than half the city's wheat arrived by railroad; by the end of the decade, Cronon notes, over 2,500 miles of track had been added in Illinois. The growth and fortunes of the city, he says, depended on climatic and economic conditions of the western lands and settlements - and vice-versa. The organization of the Board of Trade and its institution of a standard grain-grading system in the 1850's, coupled with technological advances such as the telegraph, elevator warehouses, and improving rail systems, assured Chicago's position as Gateway City, despite stiff competition from St. Louis. Cronon shows, however, how Chicago became very much a victim of its own success. By combining with the railroads to open so large a market for so vast a region, it had encouraged the human migration, environmental changes, and economic developments that produced other great cities whose emergence by the turn of the century diluted Chicago's domination in the handling and transport of huge quantities of raw materials and wholesale products. An abundance of material, adequately presented and copiously footnoted. (Kirkus Reviews) Author InformationWilliam Cronon is Frederick Jackson Turner Professor of History, Geography, and Environmental Studies at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |