The New Urban History
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Leo Francis Schnore
and Leo Francis Schnore
About this book
As part of the new consciousness concerning the history of the American city, younger historians, economists, and geographers working with quantitative methods on urban-historical problems were brought together at a conference sponsored by the History Advisory Committee of the Mathematical Social Science Board. The papers in this volume, products of the conference, represent the pioneer stage of quantitative exploration in United States urban history.
United by a common concern with the growth of cities in society and the effects of growth on the internal organization and related social order of cities, the papers deal with such topics as jobs, residences, neighborhoods, adjustment, status, accommodation, innovation, and location. The authors attempt to measure some of the attitudes and behavior of capitalists, workers, immigrants, and freedmen, and speculate on the ways in which households, firms, and assorted social groupings cope with changing physical and social environments.
The essays demonstrate the productive use of quantitative research techniques, ranging from simple enumeration of data in tabular form to sophisticated types of statistical hypothesis- testing and mathematical modeling.
Originally published in 1975.
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Frontmatter
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Series Preface
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Contents
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Further Reflections on the “New” Urban History: A Prefatory Note
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Two Cheers for Quantitative History: An Agnostic Foreword
12 - PART ONE. THE GROWTH AND FUNCTION OF CITIES
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1. Large-City Interdependence and the Pre-Electronic Diffusion of Innovations in the United States
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2. Growth of the Central Districts in Large Cities
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3. Urban Deconcentration in the Nineteenth Century: A Statistical Inquiry
110 - PART TWO. ACCOMMODATIONS TO THE URBAN ENVIRONMENT
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4. Patterns of Residence in Early Milwaukee
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5. Urban Blacks in the South, 1865-1920: The Richmond, Savannah, New Orleans, Louisville and Birmingham Experience
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6. Fundamentalism and Urbanization: A Quantitative Critique of Impressionistic Interpretations
205 - PART THREE. ECONOMIC ANALYSIS OF URBAN-HISTORICAL PHENOMENA
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7. Urbanization and Slavery: The Issue of Compatibility
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8. Urbanization and Inventiveness in the United States, 1870-1920
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9. Firm Location and Optimal City Size in American History
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The Contributors
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Index of Names and Places
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Backmatter
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