Celebrate Presidents Day with Us! Enjoy 10% off your order from 2/16-2/21
In 1901 Buffalo was the national symbol of the county's optimism, pride, and braggadocio. Toward the close of the century, it epitomizes the sense of economic and demographic crisis prevelant in American industrial cities.
High Hopes analyzes and interprrets the historical forces--external and internal--that have shaped New York's second largest city. It examines the historical shifts that have served as a catalyst in Buffalo's growth, charting the city's evolution from a small frontier community through its development as a major commercial center and its emergence and eventual decline as a significant industrial metropolis. Mark Goldman looks at the detailed patterns of local daily life from the settelment of the village in the early nineteenth century to the tragedy of Love Canal. In the process, he covers a wide range of topics, including work, ethnicity, family and community life, class structure, and values and beleifs. By bringing to bear on the events and developments that have shaped Buffalo a broad range of subjects and ideas, Goldman helps readers to understand the vast array of complex forces at work in the historical development of all American cities.
Celebrate Presidents Day with Us! Enjoy 10% off your order from 2/16-2/21