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Engineering Philadelphia

The Sellers Family and the Industrial Metropolis
  • Domenic Vitiello
Language: English
Published/Copyright: 2014
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About this book

Asweeping account of enterprise and ingenuity, economic development and urban planning, and the rise and fall of Philadelphia as an industrial metropolis, focusing on the influential Sellers family.

Author / Editor information

Domenic Vitiello is Assistant Professor of City Planning and Urban Studies at the University of Pennsylvania and author of The Philadelphia Stock Exchange and the City It Made.

Reviews

Geoff Zylstra:

Vitiello employs the long story of the Sellers family to describe the development of Philadelphia's business and industrial organizations and to connect these organizations to Philadelphia’s growth and decline as an industrial center....This sort of insightful long-range analysis makes Engineering Philadelphia relevant to historians and planners and shows howhistorical studies can benefit those currently working in planning or politics.... The dual focus on industrial businessnetworks and urban development... seems like an ideal combination to bring a concentrated historical analysis to bear onlarger themes of urban geography.

William Pencak, University of Southern Alabamaeditor,:

Although the most famous family member, Escol Sellers, was the model for Mark Twain's quintessential capitalist/speculator/scoundrel in The Gilded Age, throughout the nineteenth century the Sellerses of Philadelphia contributed constructively to the city's economic growth, urban planning, and political reform. Domenic Vitiello has written business history at its best—wonderful stories about interesting people framed by a strong understanding of how family and social networks interacted with technological and political change to shape the nineteenth-century metropolis.

Donna J. Rilling:

Engineering Philadelphiaexamines the remarkable Sellerses, Philadelphia machinists whose talents and inventive significance spanned the long nineteenth century. Much more than a treatment of one company, entrepreneur, or even industry, this book connects the Sellers men to economic development, urban geography, social reform, nation-building, and, ultimately, deindustrialization; not, however, as subjects, but as powerful agents with deliberate intentions and wide-ranging, often successful, goals. Vitiello's comprehensive and fluid analysis of these machine-building men reveals the Sellers family's holistic approach to furthering their goals. In devoting themselves to constructing educational, civic, and urban infrastructure, the Sellerses 'engineered' a city that was integral to national and international markets.

Eric J. Morser:

[Engineering Philadelphia] is a fine contribution to economic history that reminds readers that to truly grasp the twisting tale of American industrialization they must understand how families such as the Sellerses made choices that shaped their world.

Philip Scranton, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, coauthor of Reimagining Business History:

Domenic Vitiello's engaging and accessible study repositions industrialization's actors as proto-planners, fabricating products as well as relationships and institutions that propelled urban economic development and, in time, battled decline. A striking asset here is that his work anatomizes both successes and failures, even when the latter expose individual, family, and organizational shortcomings. Engineering Philadelphia is essential reading for all concerned with urban and industrial history.

Robert D. Lewis, University of Toronto, author of Chicago Made: Factory Networks in the Industrial Metropolis:

Domenic Vitiello deploys the history of one firm—that of the Sellers family—as a window into understanding the broad sweep of American capitalism over 250 years. Vitiello successfully demonstrates how the Sellers family was embedded in worlds operating at the neighborhood, city, regional, and national scales. The tracing of American industrial history through the business history of one family is a fascinating way to explore the issues Vitiello raises.


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Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
February 15, 2014
eBook ISBN:
9780801469749
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
288
Other:
27 halftones
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