LOS ANGELES Los Angeles dates from the seventeenth century. Its 1900 population slightly exceeded 100,000, the 36th largest in the nation. Yet as late as
Category: As Two Ships Chapter Topics
Chapter 8: Baby Big Cities of the Pacific: the Northwest, Portland and Seattle and their city-building Port Authorities
The Pacific Northwest The 1890 populations of Los Angeles, Oakland, Portland and Seattle ranged between 43,000 and 50,000 (San Francisco about 300,000). But over the
Chapter 8: BABY BIG CITIES OF THE PACIFIC: SAN FRANCISCO
BABY BIG CITIES OF THE PACIFIC: SAN FRANCISCO Our history centers on why San Francisco competed not only with its southern California neighbor, Los Angeles,
Chapter 8: Western City-Building, City-Builders and Business Elites, Way More than Boosterism
City-Building, City-Builders and Business Elites “Nature does not make cities,” William Angel writes. “People make them.” The “taming” of the frontier can be viewed …
Chapter 8: Western-style City-building: Land Speculation and Railroad-led ED: Denver, Wichita, Oklahoma, the East Imposes its Hegemony-the mercantile model
Land Speculation and Homesteading: Railroad-Style CD Privatist land speculation typified a city’s earliest years, and in western states private land speculation followed from how Congress
Chapter 8: Western economic development into the twenties: Golden Age of City-building (1880-1920) and Instant Cities
Western economic development into the twenties Cities in western states are not simply late-starting, warmed-over eastern cities. The recipe that made them is different, and