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LEADER: 09834cam 2200577 a 4500
001 ocm53932600
003 OCoLC
005 20181108080338.0
008 031210s2004 ilu b 001 0deng
010 $a 2003026813
040 $aDLC$beng$cDLC$dYDX$dUKM$dBAKER$dBTCTA$dYDXCP$dOCLCG$dQE2$dOCLCQ$dUKMGB$dMNE$dOCLCF$dOCLCQ$dOCLCO
015 $aGBA4Y8978$2bnb
016 7 $a006934046$2Uk
020 $a0226668215$q(alk. paper)
020 $a9780226668215$q(alk. paper)
035 $a(OCoLC)53932600
043 $an-us-il
050 00 $aF548.3$b.A8 2004
082 00 $a977.3/111$222
245 00 $aAs others see Chicago :$bimpressions of visitors, 1673-1933 /$ccompiled and edited by Bessie Louise Pierce ; with the assistance of Joe L. Norris ; with a new foreword by Perry R. Duis.
260 $aChicago :$bUniversity of Chicago Press,$c℗♭2004.
300 $axxxi, 540 pages ;$c23 cm
336 $atext$btxt$2rdacontent
337 $aunmediated$bn$2rdamedia
338 $avolume$bnc$2rdacarrier
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references (pages 518-523) and index.
505 00 $tForeword to the 2004 edition /$rPerry R. Duis --$gpt. I.$tbeginning of a city --$tIntroduction --$twinter at Chicago /$rJacques Marquette --$tmission of the guardian angel /$rJohn Francis Buisson de St. Cosme --$tsoil of Chicago /$rSamuel A. Storrow --$tChicago River /$rSamuel A. Storrow --$tFort Dearborn and Chicago /$rJohn Tipton --$tnatural history, Indians, and disadvantages of Chicago /$rWilliam H. Keating --$tChicago in 1833 in the eyes of an investor /$rCharles Butler --$tLand speculation --$tPottawattomie treaty /$rCharles Joseph Latrobe --$tFort Dearborn and Chicago /$rCharles Joseph Latrobe --$tPottawattomie Indians /$rCharles Joseph Latrobe --$tChicago /$rCharles Joseph Latrobe --$ttreaty /$rCharles Joseph Latrobe --$tTrade and hotels in 1833 /$rPatrick Shirreff --$tball /$rCharles Fenno Hoffman --$tweather /$rCharles Fenno Hoffman --$thorse race and a wolf hunt /$rCharles Fenno Hoffman --$tHouses, hotels, and people /$rHarriet Martineau --$tChicago in 1840 /$rJames Silk Buckingham --$tprairie /$rSarah Margaret Fuller --$tlake /$rSarah Margaret Fuller --$tSeeing Chicago from a "trap" /$rJohn Lewis Peyton --$tBusiness in Chicago /$rJohn Lewis Peyton --$tWildcat banking /$rJohn Lewis Peyton --$tdinner at Chicago /$rJohn Lewis Peyton --$tDrainage of land /$rJohn Lewis Peyton --$tvisit to the theater /$rJohn Lewis Peyton --$twinter morning /$rJohn Lewis Peyton --$tAmusements /$rJohn Lewis Peyton --$gpt. II.$tera of expansion --$tIntroduction --$tPrairies /$rFredrika Bremer --$tGermans in Chicago /$rFredrika Bremer --$tphysical setting of Chicago /$rJ.J. Ampere --$tHouses, churches, and schools /$rJ.J. Ampere --$treaper /$rJ.J. Ampere --$tRecreation /$rJ.J. Ampere --$tprairie /$rJ.J. Ampere --$tadvertising house /$rIsabella Lucy (Bird) Bishop --$tPhysical setting /$rIsabella Lucy (Bird) Bishop --$tStreets, buildings, waterways, and railways /$rWilliam Ferguson --$tChicago in the fifties /$rAnonymous --$tChicago River /$rAnonymous --$tStreets and bridges /$rAnonymous --$tbridge in fictitious literature /$rAnonymous --$tBuildings /$rAnonymous --$tThoroughfares /$rAnonymous --$tDress of Chicagoans /$rAnonymous --$tFort Dearborn /$rAnonymous --$twater supply /$rAnonymous --$tHotels and hotel food /$rAnonymous --$tMoney /$rAnonymous --$tObservance of the Sabbath /$rAnonymous --$tChicago -- a mean spot /$rEdward L. Peckham --$tsetting of Chicago /$rWilliam Howard Russell --$tChicago in the Civil War /$rWilliam Howard Russell --$tNorwegian immigrant in Chicago in the 1860's /$rChristian H. Jevne --$tChicago's buildings /$rF. Barham Zincke --$tCity ordinances /$rF. Barham Zincke --$tTrinity Church /$rF. Barham Zincke --$tSecular and religious schools /$rF. Barham Zincke --$tChicago's drinking water /$rF. Barham Zincke --$tgreat fire of 1871 /$rAlexander Frear --$gpt. III.$trise of a modern city --$tIntroduction --$tFive years after the fire /$rJohn Leng --$tBuildings /$rJohn Leng --$tstockyards /$rJohn Leng --$tboard of trade /$rJohn Leng --$t"The situation of Chicago," waterworks and parks /$rJohn Leng --$tGrand and stately Chicago /$rDuffus Hardy --$tProminent characteristics of chicago /$rAnonymous --$tcity rebuilt /$rAnonymous --$tTrade, traffic, and building /$rAnonymous --$tunion stock yards /$rAnonymous --$tChicago board of trade /$rAnonymous --$tInfluential men of Chicago : Philip D. Armour, Marshall Field, Farwells, Potter Palmer (Palmer House), Bankers, George M. Pullman /$rAnonymous --$tHow I struck Chicago, and how Chicago struck Me. Of religion, politics, and pig-sticking, and the incarnation of the city among shambles /$rRudyard Kipling --$tevolution of industry /$rPaul de Rousiers --$tPullman workshops and the city of Pullman /$rPaul de Rousiers --$tcity of smoke /$rGuiseppe Giacosa --$trapidly moving and business-like city /$rJulian Ralph --$tChicago's buildings /$rJulian Ralph --$tMetropolitan area /$rJulian Ralph --$tcity of young men /$rJulian Ralph --$tManufactures /$rJulian Ralph --$tClubs /$rJulian Ralph --$tdistinctly American city /$rJulian Ralph --$tChicago's parks, streets, and homes /$rJulian Ralph --$twomen of Chicago /$rJulian Ralph --$tChicago and the world's Columbian exposition /$rM.E. Bruwaert --$twhite city /$rMulji Devji Vedant --$tChicago, the city contrasts /$rJames Fullarton Muirhead --$tworld's fair /$rWilliam T. Stead --$tDestruction of world's fair buildings /$rWilliam T. Stead --$ttrade and labor assembly /$rWilliam T. Stead --$tinteresting year 1893 /$rWilliam T. Stead --$tromance of Chicago /$rWilliam T. Stead --$gpt. IV.$tFrom world's fair to world's fair --$tIntroduction --$tstrange and unreal scene /$rPaul Bourget --$ttraffic in meat /$rPaul Bourget --$tSunday edition of a newspaper /$rPaul Bourget --$tChicago, the amazing /$rGeorge Warrington Steevens --$tcity of Pork and Plato /$rPrice Collier --$tChicago -- its splendor and squalor /$rWilliam Archer --$tIndustry and strikes /$rCount Peter de Vaya and Luskod --$tEducational and religious institutions /$rCount Peter de Vaya and Luskod --$tParks and recreation /$rCount Peter de Vaya and Luskod --$tForeigners in Chicago /$rCount Peter de Vaya and Luskod --$tinauguration of a church /$rCount Peter de Vaya and Luskod --$tChicago and the Chicagoans /$rEdward Hungerford --$tChicago's individuality /$rJulian Street --$tMarshall field's and the Chicago Tribune /$rJulian Street --$tSkyscrapers and the stockyards /$rJulian Street --$tCity Planning /$rJulian Street --$tUniversities and armistice day /$rArthur Everett Shipley --$tcity without peace /$rWalter Lionel George --$tMass and space /$rWalter Lionel George --$tArmour's packing plant /$rWalter Lionel George --$tChicago's "boosting" /$rWalter Lionel George --$tAttitude toward the arts /$rWalter Lionel George --$thotel, a restaurant, and newspapers /$rHarold Spender --$tlecture at Northwestern University /$rHarold Spender --$tsoul of Chicago /$rWaldo Frank --$ttumultuous magnificence of Chicago /$rCharles Cheers Wakefield --$tsoup kitchen of a gangster /$rMary Borden --$tuniversity president, a Chinese mayor, and an Arbian aristocrat /$rMary Borden --$tfour hundred /$rMary Borden --$tChicago melting-pot /$rMary Borden --$tChicago, the city of magic /$rMary Borden --$tgunman and the racketeer /$rG.K. Chesterton --$tChicago's dramatic approach /$rMorris Markey --$tCivic pride /$rMorris Markey --$tSome Chicago citizenry /$rMorris Markey --$tcity of urgency and of furious endeavor /$rMorris Markey.
520 1 $a"As Others See Chicago consists of writings culled from over a thousand men and women who visited the city and commented on the best and worst it had to offer from the skyscrapers to the stockyards. Originally compiled by Bessie Louise Pierce, the first major historian of Chicago, and featuring her own commentary, the volume brings together the impressions of visitors to Chicago over two and a half centuries, from the early years of westward expansion to the height of the Great Depression. In addition to writings from better known personalities such as Rudyard Kipling and Waldo Frank, the book collects the opinions of missionaries aristocrats, journalists, and politicians observers who were perfectly placed to comment on the development of the city, its inhabitants, and well known events that would one day define Chicago history, such as the Great Fire of 1871 and the 1893 World's Fair."--Jacket.
651 0 $aChicago (Ill.)$xDescription and travel$vSources.
651 0 $aChicago (Ill.)$xSocial life and customs$vSources.
651 0 $aChicago (Ill.)$xHistory$vSources.
650 0 $aVisitors, Foreign$zIllinois$zChicago.
650 0 $aTravelers' writings.
650 7 $aManners and customs.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst01007815
650 7 $aTravel.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst01155558
650 7 $aTravelers' writings.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst01155719
650 7 $aVisitors, Foreign.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst01167960
651 7 $aIllinois$zChicago.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst01204048
655 7 $aHistory.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst01411628
655 7 $aSources.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst01423900
700 1 $aPierce, Bessie Louise,$d1888-1974.
700 1 $aNorris, Joe Lester,$d1906-
856 41 $3Table of contents$uhttp://catdir.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip0412/2003026813.html
856 42 $3Contributor biographical information$uhttp://catdir.loc.gov/catdir/bios/uchi051/2003026813.html
856 42 $3Publisher description$uhttp://catdir.loc.gov/catdir/description/uchi052/2003026813.html
938 $aBaker & Taylor$bBKTY$c19.00$d19.00$i0226668215$n0004369929$sactive
938 $aBaker and Taylor$bBTCP$n2003026813
938 $aYBP Library Services$bYANK$n2054529
029 1 $aAU@$b000025186794
994 $aZ0$bP4A
948 $hNO HOLDINGS IN P4A - 111 OTHER HOLDINGS