Gotham: a history of New York City to 1898
Gespeichert in:
Hauptverfasser: | , |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
New York, NY [u.a.]
Oxford Univ. Press
2000
|
Ausgabe: | 1. issued as an Oxford Univ. Press paperback |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Includes bibliographical references (p. [1263]-1305) and indexes |
Beschreibung: | XXIV, 1383 S. Ill., Kt. |
ISBN: | 0195116348 0195140494 |
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a Gotham |b a history of New York City to 1898 |c Edwin G. Burrows and Mike Wallace |
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648 | 7 | |a Geschichte 1626-1898 |2 gnd |9 rswk-swf | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | SI
Contents
m
Introduction
PART ONE LENAPE COUNTRY AND NEW AMSTERDAM TO 1664
i. First Impressions The physical setting. From Ice Age to Indian ecosystems.
European exploration of the lower Hudson Valley in the sixteenth century. 3
2. The Men Who Bought Manhattan Holland breaks with Spain.
The Dutch West India Company, the fur trade, and the founding of Hew
Amsterdam in 1626. 14
3. Company Town Hew Amsterdam s first twenty years. Race, sex, and
trouble with the English. Kieft *s War against the Indians. 27
4. Stuyvesant Peter Stuyvesant to the rescue. Law and order. Slavery and
the slave trade. Expansion of settlement on Manhattan and Long Island. 41
5. A City Lost, a City Gained Local disaffection with Stuyvesant fs rule and
the organization of municipal government. Stuyvesant s conflict with Jews,
Lutherans, and Quakers. Anglo-Dutch war and the English conquest of 1664. 57
PART TWO BRITISH NEW YORK (1664-1783)
6. Empire and Oligarchy The persistence of Dutch law and folkways under
the duke of York *s lenient proprietorship. Slow economic and demographic
expansion. The Dutch briefly recapture the city. 77
7. Jacob Leisler’s Rebellion Taut times in the 1680s. Protestants and Catholics,
English and Dutch, new grandees and disaffected commoners. Leister s uprising
as Dutch last stand and “people ’s Revolución. ” #, 91
vi is Contents
8.
9·
IO.
II.
12.
13·
H·
«5·
i6.
Heats and Animosityes The English anglicize New York: church and state,
docks and lots, scavengers and constables, Stadthuis to City Hall Privateering,
piracy, and Captain KiddDomestic politics and international conflict through
Queen Anne *s War (1715)· I03
In the Kingdom of Sugar The West Indian connection: white gold,
black slaves, yellow fever. The town that trade built: shipyards and refineries,
barristers and Jack Tars. Germans and Irish, Catholics and Jews. 118
One Body Corporate and Politic? A new charter establishes the colonial
city as self-governing corporation. Rules and regulations for dealing with
disobedient servants, rebellious slaves, the disorderly poor. 138
Recession, Revival, and Rebellion Trade slump. The Zenger affair; religious
revivals, and the “Negro Conspiracy** of 1741. 15°
War and Wealth Imperial wars in the 1740s and 1750s as route to riches:
provisioned and privateers. Empire and industry. Refined patrician precincts,
artisanal wards, municipal improvements. 167
Crises Peace and depression. Hardship after 1765. The British crackdown
and local resistance. The Sons of Liberty and Stamp Act rioters.
A temporary victory. 191
The Demon of Discord Renewed imperial extractions. Revived opposition
to Great Britian, 1766-1775. Popular politics and religion. Whigs and Tories. 205
Revolution Radical patriots take control of the city, 1775-1776.
The Battle of Long Island. New York falls to the British. 223
The Gibraltar of North America The military occupation of
New York City, 1776-1783. Washington s triumphal return. 245
17·
18.
19.
20.
21.
PART THREE MERCANTILE TOWN ( 1783-1 843)
Phoenix Rebuilding the war-ravaged city. The radical whigs take power.
New New Yorkers. The Empress of China.
The Revolution Settlement Hamilton negotiates a rapprochement between
radical and conservative whigs, securing the revolution. Daughters of Liberty,
the reconstruction of slavery. 2
The Grand Federal Procession Adoption and ratification of the
Constitution. The great parade of July i788. Washington s Inauguration
in 1789. 288
Capital Gty New York as seal of the national government, 1789-17go.
Hamilton, Duer, and the moneyed men. From capital city to city of capital.
First banks. first stock market, first Wall Street crash
299
Revolutions Foreign and Domestic Imp of the French Revolution
Party struggles in the 1790s. The election of ¡800. Prying open the municipal
franchise. The Burr-Hamilton duel.
313
Contents □! vii
22. Queen of Commerce, Jack of All Trades The city }s explosive growth in
the 1790$ as local merchants take advantage of war in Europe, westward
expansion, and the demandfor southern cotton. Transformation of the crafts,
the end of slavery: 333
23. The Road to City Hall Demise of municipal corporation, rise of city
government. Attending to civic crises: water, fever; garbage, fire, poverty,
crime. A new City Hall. 353
24. Philosophes and Philanthropists Upper-class life styles in the 1790s and early
1800s. Learned men and cultivated women. Republican benevolence: charity,
education, public health, religious instruction. 371
25. From Crowd to Class Artisan communities. Turmoil in the trades. Infidels,
evangelicals, and the advent of Tom Paine. Africans and Irishtown. Charlotte
Temple and Mother Carey *s bawdy house. 386
26. War and Peace The drift toward a second war with Britain, 1807-1812.
Embargo and impressment, destitute Tars and work-relief Battles over foreign
policy. Washington Irving and Diedrich Knickerbocker. The gridding of New
York. War: 1812-1815. 409
27. The Canal Era Postwar doldrums give way to the 1820s boom. Erie Canal,
steamboat, packet lines, communication, emporium and financial center.
Real estate boom and manufacturing surge. The role of government. 429
28. The Medici of the Republic Upper-class religion, fashion, domestic
arrangements, invention of Christmas, Lafayette returns, Greeks revive,
patricians patronize the arts and architecture (Cooper; Cole, et al.). 452
29. Working Quarters Callithumpian bands, plebeian neighborhoods,
women and work, sex and saloons, theater and religion, jumping Jim Crow,
‘1running wid de machine. ” 473
30. Reforms and Revivals Poverty and pauperism, urban missionaries, schools,
reformatories, poorhouses, hospitals, jails. 493
31. The Press of Democracy Fanny Wrightists, democrats and aristocrats,
workers and bosses, birth of the penny press. 509
32. The Destroying Demon of Debauchery Finney v. Fanny, temperance
and Graham crackers, Alagdalens and whores. 529
33· White, Green, and Black Catholics and nativists, drawing the color line,
white slaves and smoked Irish, abolitionists and the underground railroad. 542
34· Rail Boom Railroads, manufacturing, real estate, stock market, housing
high and low. Brooklyn: the Second City. Good times, pleasure gardens. 563
35· Filth, Fever, Water, Fire Garbage, cholera, Croton, and the
Great Blaze. 5 7
36. The Panic of 1837 Labor wars, equal rights, flour riot. The boom collapses,
whys and wherefores. 603
viii |Q Contents
37·
№
Hard Times Life in depression. Battles over relief and the role of
government. Revivals and Romanism. Gangs, police, and P. T. Barnum.
619
38.
39·
40.
PART FOUR EMPORIUM AND MANUFACTURING CITY (1844-1879)
9
Full Steam Ahead The great boom of the 1840s and 1850s: immigration,
foreign trade, manufacturing, railroads, retailing, and finance.
The Crystal Palace and the Marble Palace. 649
Manhattan, Ink New York as national media center: telegraph,
newspapers, books, writers, art market, photography. 674
Seeing New York Flaneuring the city. Crowds and civilization. Lights
and shadows. Mysteries and histories. Poe, Melville, Whitman, and the city as
literary subject. 691
41. Life Above Bleecker The new bourgeoise repairs to its squares.
Uppertendom opulence and middle-class respectability. Sex, feminism,
baseball, religion, and death. 712
42. City of Immigrants New immigrant and working-class neighborhoods in
the 1840s and 1850s. Irish and Germans at work and play. Jews and
Catholics. B hoys and boxing. The underworld and the world of.Mose. 735
43·
44·
45·
46.
47·
48.
49.
SO-
S ·
Co-op City Plebeian opposition to the new urban order: the Astor Riot,
land reform, co-ops, nativism, red republicanism, unionism. 761
Into the Crazy-Loved Dens of Death Upper- and middle-class reformers
debate laissez-faire and environmentalism. Welfare, education, health, housing,
recreation. Central Park. 774
Feme Dccovert The homosocial city. Female discontents and feminist
demands. Prostitution exposed. Abortion defended. Free love andfashion.
Jenny Lind and commercial culture. 796
Louis Napoleon and Fernando Wood Eyeing Haussmann s Paris. City-
building, Tammany style. Municipal politics indicted. Mayor Wood as civic hero.
The loss of home rule. Police riots and Dead Rabbits. 821
The Panic of 1857 The boom falters. New Yorkers divide over how to
deal with hard times.
The House Divides Sectional and racial antagonisms. Republicans,
blacks, the struggle for civil rights. John Brown s body.
C ՝ ¡1II ars The city s mercantile elite first backs the South, then swings into
the Union camp. B hoys, g’hals, and reformers to war. New York s role in
financing and supplying the war effort forges the Shoddy Aristocracy·.
Carnage and class.
The Battle for New York The politics of Emancipation and death.
The Draft Riots. The plot to burn New York.
Westward, Ho! The merchant community, its historic ties to the South
842
852
Contents Dl ix
ruptured, turns westward. Railroading sustains boom into the late 1860s and
1870s. Wall Street and the West. The West and Wall Street. 906
52. Reconstructing New York Radical Republicans seek to reform housing,
health, and firefighting and to win the black franchise. 917
53. City Building Boss Tweed builds roads, bridges, sewers, rapid transit,
and parks. Urban expansion: upper Manhattan, Brooklyn, andQiieens.
Rapid transit and Brooklyn Bridge. Downtown business districts: finance,
rails, communication, Ladies Mile, and the Radio. 929
54. Haut Monde and Demimonde The wealthy fashion a culture of extravagant
pleasure, modeled on the lifestyle of Parisian aristocrats (plus a
dash of Dodge City). 951
55. The Professional-Managerial Class The middle class expands in size,
deepens in self-awareness, elaborates distinctive patterns of domesticity,
education, religion, amusement, and politics. 966
56. Eight Hours for What We Will The laboring classes at work, at home,
at play. Resurgent union, radical, and nationalist movements. 986
57. The New York Commune? The Tweed Ring toppled in early 1870s, for
running up a massive municipal debt and for failing, at a time when the
Paris Commune has unnerved local elites, to * manage ” the Irish working class
(as evidenced in the bloody Orange riots along Eighth Avenue). 1002
58. Work or Bread! The boom collapses in 1873, pitching the city into long-lived
depression. Working class demands for unemployed assistance, paced by German
socialists, are met by grim assertion of order at Tompkins Square, and
cutbacks in welfare. 1020
PART FIVE INDUSTRIAL CENTER AND CORPORATE COMMAND POST
(1880-1898)
59· Manhattan, Inc. The economy revives. New York facilitates
national industrialization, spawns corporate economy. Banks, exchanges,
trade, advertising, marketing, communication flourish, housed in ever taller
commercial buildings. I °41
60. Bright Lights, Big City T. A. Edison, J. P. Morgan, and the electrification
of the city. I059
61. Chateaux Society New industrial andfinancial elites gatecrash old
mercantile society. Manhattan Medici create lavish upper-class order, forge
genteel cultural institutions. * °71
62. ‘The Leeches Must Go!” Henry George ՝s 1886 mayoralty campaign.
Irish nationalists, German socialists, radical priests, and unionists vs.
Tammany Hall, Catholic hierarchy, and propertied reformers. 1089
^3* The New Immigrants Jews, Italians, Chinese. 1111
X |Q Contents
64.
65.
66.
67.
68.
69.
That’s Entertainment! The Broadway stage,, Pulitzer, vaudeville;
Tin Pan Alley, boxing, baseball, Coney Island. New York generates cultural
commodities, hawks them to the nation. 1132
Purity Crusade Henry George militancy and burgeoning immigrant
quarters rouse middle-class reporters, writers, ministers. Genteel reformers
uphold decency, oppose sin—particularly prostitution and saloons. 1155
Social Gospel Salvation Army, Crane, Charity Organization Society,
s.
the institutional church, YWCA, ethical culture, settlement houses, Howells
and Crane, Jacob Riis. 1170
Good Government Collapse of the economy in 1893. Genteel and
business reformers capture City Hall in 1894. Eastern sound-money forces,
headquartered in NYC, beat back western challenge to corporate order
in 1896 presidential campaign. 1185
Splendid Little War Teddy Roosevelt, Jose Marti, William Randolph
Hearst, and Empire as Rx for depression. 1209
Imperial City Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, the Bronx, and
Staten Island consolidate—not without acrimony—forming Greater
New York. T2TO
References
Bibliography
Acknowledgments
Indexes
1237
1263
1307
1313
|
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spelling | Burrows, Edwin G. Verfasser aut Gotham a history of New York City to 1898 Edwin G. Burrows and Mike Wallace 1. issued as an Oxford Univ. Press paperback New York, NY [u.a.] Oxford Univ. Press 2000 XXIV, 1383 S. Ill., Kt. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Includes bibliographical references (p. [1263]-1305) and indexes Geschichte 1626 gnd rswk-swf Geschichte 1626-1898 gnd rswk-swf Geschichte New York (N.Y.) History New York, NY (DE-588)4042011-5 gnd rswk-swf New York, NY (DE-588)4042011-5 g Geschichte 1626-1898 z DE-604 Geschichte 1626 z 1\p DE-604 Wallace, Mike 1942- Verfasser (DE-588)1056115432 aut Digitalisierung UB Bamberg - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=009277490&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis 1\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk |
spellingShingle | Burrows, Edwin G. Wallace, Mike 1942- Gotham a history of New York City to 1898 Geschichte |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4042011-5 |
title | Gotham a history of New York City to 1898 |
title_auth | Gotham a history of New York City to 1898 |
title_exact_search | Gotham a history of New York City to 1898 |
title_full | Gotham a history of New York City to 1898 Edwin G. Burrows and Mike Wallace |
title_fullStr | Gotham a history of New York City to 1898 Edwin G. Burrows and Mike Wallace |
title_full_unstemmed | Gotham a history of New York City to 1898 Edwin G. Burrows and Mike Wallace |
title_short | Gotham |
title_sort | gotham a history of new york city to 1898 |
title_sub | a history of New York City to 1898 |
topic | Geschichte |
topic_facet | Geschichte New York (N.Y.) History New York, NY |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=009277490&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT burrowsedwing gothamahistoryofnewyorkcityto1898 AT wallacemike gothamahistoryofnewyorkcityto1898 |