Urban Growth in the Age of Sectionalism: Virginia, 1847–1861

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LSU Press, 1999 M03 1 - 335 páginas

The urban growth of Virginia during the decade and a half before the Civil War has been an unjustly neglected subject in American history. With this authoritative book David Goldfield fills a long-standing gap in historical scholarship by providing much new information and a fresh perspective on urban development in the Old Dominion during the turbulent antebellum years.

According to Goldfield’s interpretation, the urbanization of Virginia was prompted, in part, by the response of the state’s leaders to the sectionalism that increasingly influenced prewar southern ideas. Caught up in the intense competition for western trade and commerce, Virginia’s urbanizers dreamed of railroads and canals flung across the continent and bringing the wealth of the West into the Old Dominion.

To realize these heroic visions, the state’s entrepreneurs planned railroad networks, invested in manufacturing, and sought to establish trade with Europe. Lynchburg and Petersburg became centers for tobacco manufacturing, the ports of Alexandria and Norfolk saw a resurgence of shipping activity, and Richmond developed flour-milling and iron-manufacturing industries. Local governments, labor systems, and the cities themselves expanded to accommodate urban growth, embracing the farmer as a partner in the urban economy. Finally, a distinct urban consciousness developed to provide an intellectual framework for the urbanization process.

Despite the unprecedented growth of Virginia’s cities, however, their dreams of economic independence remained unfulfilled. By 1861 the state was more economically dependent on its northern rivals than it had ever been before. As the state reluctantly seceded from the Union, the subject of urban economic growth elicited sharp debate at the secession convention. Urban Virginia would have to wait until the “New South” years to renew the dreams of economic independence.

Dentro del libro

Contenido

Redeemed Regenerated and Disenthralled
1
The CityBuilders
29
Activity Rate of Urban Leadership 18471861
33
Occupation of Urban Leadership 1850
35
Real Property Holding of Urban Leadership 1850
37
Slave Ownership of Urban Leadership 1850
39
Persistence and Priority of Urban Leadership 18401860
41
Nativity of Urban Leadership 1850
42
Boarders by Richmond Study Group
77
Relative Boarders of Richmond Study Group
78
Family Boarders of Richmond Study Group
79
Occupational Boarders of Richmond Study Group
80
Servant Boarders of Richmond Study Group
81
Unknown Boarders of Richmond Study Group
82
Slave Ownership by Richmond Study Group
83
Male Slaves Owned by Richmond Study Group
84

Age of Urban Leadership 1850
43
Marital Status of Urban Leadership 1850
44
Age of Wives of Urban Leaders 1850
45
Number of Children of Urban Leaders 1850
46
Age of Children of Urban Leaders 1850
47
Boarders of Urban Leaders 1850
49
Occupation by Richmond Study Group
69
Age by Richmond Study Group
70
Real Property by Richmond Study Group
71
Marital Status by Richmond Study Group
72
Age of Wives by Richmond Study Group
73
Number of Children by Richmond Study Group
74
Age of Youngest Child by Richmond Study Group
75
Age of Eldest Child by Richmond Study Group
76
Female Slaves Owned by Richmond Study Group
85
Persistence by Richmond Study Group
86
Nativity of Richmond Study Group
87
Accommodation of Commerce and Labor
97
Emergence of Local Government
139
Cityhood
182
Urban Virginia in an Urban Nation
226
Share of Total Value of Exports of Principal Ports 18151860
242
The Renewed South
271
A Crosstabulation and the Computer
287
B Virginias Urban Leaders and Their Associational
309
Bibliography
315
Index
331
Derechos de autor

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Acerca del autor (1999)

David Goldfield is Robert Lee Bailey Professor of History at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, the author and editor of sixteen books on the American South, most recently America Aflame: How the Civil War Created a Nation, and serves as editor of the LSU Press series Making the Modern South.

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