The history of New York City’s urban development often centers on titanic municipal figures like Robert Moses and on prominent inner Manhattan sites like Central Park. New York Recentered boldly shifts the focus to the city’s geographic edges—the coastlines and waterways—and to the small-time unelected locals who quietly shaped the modern city. Kara Murphy Schlichting details how the vernacular planning done by small businessmen and real estate operators, performed independently of large scale governmental efforts, refigured marginal locales like Flushing Meadows and the shores of Long Island Sound and the East River in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The result is a synthesis of planning history, environmental history, and urban history that recasts the story of New York as we know it.
Author(s): Kara Murphy Schlichting
Series: Historical Studies of Urban America
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Year: 2019
Language: English
Pages: 329
City: Chicago
Frontmatter
Contents
Introduction
1. Benefactor Planning: Barnums Bridgeport and Steinways Queens
2. Laying Out the Trans-Harlem City
3. Working-Class Leisure on the Upper East River and Sound
4. Designing a Coastal Playland around Long Island Sound
5. They Shall Not Pass: Opposition to Public Leisure and State Park Planning
6. From Dumps to Glory: Flushing Meadows and the New York Worlds Fair of 1939-1940
Epilogue
Acknowledgments
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index