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Frances F. Dunwell presents a rich portrait of the Hudson and of the visionary people whose deep relationship with the river inspires changes in American history and culture. Lavishly illustrated with color plates of Hudson River School paintings, period engravings, and glass plate photography, The Hudson captures the spirit of the river through the eyes of its many admirers. It shows the crucial role of the Hudson in the shaping of Manhattan, the rise of the Empire State, and the trajectory of world trade and global politics, as well as the river's influence on art and architecture, engineering, and conservation.…mehr
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Frances F. Dunwell presents a rich portrait of the Hudson and of the visionary people whose deep relationship with the river inspires changes in American history and culture. Lavishly illustrated with color plates of Hudson River School paintings, period engravings, and glass plate photography, The Hudson captures the spirit of the river through the eyes of its many admirers. It shows the crucial role of the Hudson in the shaping of Manhattan, the rise of the Empire State, and the trajectory of world trade and global politics, as well as the river's influence on art and architecture, engineering, and conservation.
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Columbia University Press
- Erscheinungstermin: 10. April 2008
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9780231509961
- Artikelnr.: 38155870
- Verlag: Columbia University Press
- Erscheinungstermin: 10. April 2008
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9780231509961
- Artikelnr.: 38155870
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
Frances F. Dunwell is the author of Hudson River Highlands and has spent over thirty years in a number of nonprofit and governmental positions dedicated to conserving the natural and historic heritage of the Hudson River.
Foreword, by Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
Prologue: River of Imagining, People of Passion and Dreams
Acknowledgments
1. World's End, World Trade, World River: Henry Hudson's Failed Quest,
Adriaen Van der Donck's Utopian Vision, and the Legend of the Storm Ship
2. The River That Unites, the River That Divides: King George and George
Washington Vie for the Hudson
3. America's River of Empire: Robert Fulton's Folly, Robert Livingston's
Venture Capital, and DeWitt Clinton's Ditch Spark the Rise of New York Port
4. First Stop on the American Tour: Europe Discovers Sylvanus Thayer's West
Point, a Catskills Sunrise, and a River That Defines the American Character
5. America's First Artists and Writers: The Sacred River of Thomas Cole,
the Mythic River of Washington Irving and James Fenimore Cooper
6. The Industrialized River: Gouverneur Kemble's Weapon Works, Henry
Burden's Iron Foundries, and Colonel Stevens's Engine Factory
7. Going up the River for Health and Fun: New York City Journalist N. P.
Willis Survives TB and Discovers an Idle Wild
8. Design with Nature: The Landscape Gardens of A. J. Downing, the
Architecture of A. J. Davis, and the Inspiration for Central Park and
Riverside Drive
9. Gateway to America, Escape Route to Canada: Immigrants Greet a Beacon of
Liberty, John Jervis Creates a New River Route, and a Railroad Goes
Underground
10. Millionaires' Row: The River Castles of J. P. Morgan, John D.
Rockefeller, Jay Gould, and Frederic Church, and the Floating Palaces of
Manhattan's West Side
11. A Forest to Protect a Commercial River: Land Surveyor Verplanck Colvin,
Photographer Seneca Ray Stoddard, and the New York Board of Trade Campaign
to Safeguard the Hudson in the Adirondacks
12. An Interstate Park for the Palisades and the Highlands and a New
Progressive Vision: Elizabeth Vermilye's Women's Clubs, Edward and Mary
Harriman's Park, Mrs. Olmsted's Fresh Air Camp, and Margaret Sage's Charity
13. Over, Under, Across, and Through: Civil Engineers Triumph Over Nature,
Except in New York Harbor
14. Surviving the Depression, Connecting with Nature: FDR's River of
Dignity, Robert Moses's Riverside Drive, and John D. Rockefeller Jr.'s
Parkway
15. The 1960s: Scenic Hudson, Riverkeeper, Clearwater, and The Nature
Conservancy Campaign to Save a Mountain and Revive a "Dead" River
Epilogue: A River of Power, and the Power of Passion
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Prologue: River of Imagining, People of Passion and Dreams
Acknowledgments
1. World's End, World Trade, World River: Henry Hudson's Failed Quest,
Adriaen Van der Donck's Utopian Vision, and the Legend of the Storm Ship
2. The River That Unites, the River That Divides: King George and George
Washington Vie for the Hudson
3. America's River of Empire: Robert Fulton's Folly, Robert Livingston's
Venture Capital, and DeWitt Clinton's Ditch Spark the Rise of New York Port
4. First Stop on the American Tour: Europe Discovers Sylvanus Thayer's West
Point, a Catskills Sunrise, and a River That Defines the American Character
5. America's First Artists and Writers: The Sacred River of Thomas Cole,
the Mythic River of Washington Irving and James Fenimore Cooper
6. The Industrialized River: Gouverneur Kemble's Weapon Works, Henry
Burden's Iron Foundries, and Colonel Stevens's Engine Factory
7. Going up the River for Health and Fun: New York City Journalist N. P.
Willis Survives TB and Discovers an Idle Wild
8. Design with Nature: The Landscape Gardens of A. J. Downing, the
Architecture of A. J. Davis, and the Inspiration for Central Park and
Riverside Drive
9. Gateway to America, Escape Route to Canada: Immigrants Greet a Beacon of
Liberty, John Jervis Creates a New River Route, and a Railroad Goes
Underground
10. Millionaires' Row: The River Castles of J. P. Morgan, John D.
Rockefeller, Jay Gould, and Frederic Church, and the Floating Palaces of
Manhattan's West Side
11. A Forest to Protect a Commercial River: Land Surveyor Verplanck Colvin,
Photographer Seneca Ray Stoddard, and the New York Board of Trade Campaign
to Safeguard the Hudson in the Adirondacks
12. An Interstate Park for the Palisades and the Highlands and a New
Progressive Vision: Elizabeth Vermilye's Women's Clubs, Edward and Mary
Harriman's Park, Mrs. Olmsted's Fresh Air Camp, and Margaret Sage's Charity
13. Over, Under, Across, and Through: Civil Engineers Triumph Over Nature,
Except in New York Harbor
14. Surviving the Depression, Connecting with Nature: FDR's River of
Dignity, Robert Moses's Riverside Drive, and John D. Rockefeller Jr.'s
Parkway
15. The 1960s: Scenic Hudson, Riverkeeper, Clearwater, and The Nature
Conservancy Campaign to Save a Mountain and Revive a "Dead" River
Epilogue: A River of Power, and the Power of Passion
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Foreword, by Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
Prologue: River of Imagining, People of Passion and Dreams
Acknowledgments
1. World's End, World Trade, World River: Henry Hudson's Failed Quest,
Adriaen Van der Donck's Utopian Vision, and the Legend of the Storm Ship
2. The River That Unites, the River That Divides: King George and George
Washington Vie for the Hudson
3. America's River of Empire: Robert Fulton's Folly, Robert Livingston's
Venture Capital, and DeWitt Clinton's Ditch Spark the Rise of New York Port
4. First Stop on the American Tour: Europe Discovers Sylvanus Thayer's West
Point, a Catskills Sunrise, and a River That Defines the American Character
5. America's First Artists and Writers: The Sacred River of Thomas Cole,
the Mythic River of Washington Irving and James Fenimore Cooper
6. The Industrialized River: Gouverneur Kemble's Weapon Works, Henry
Burden's Iron Foundries, and Colonel Stevens's Engine Factory
7. Going up the River for Health and Fun: New York City Journalist N. P.
Willis Survives TB and Discovers an Idle Wild
8. Design with Nature: The Landscape Gardens of A. J. Downing, the
Architecture of A. J. Davis, and the Inspiration for Central Park and
Riverside Drive
9. Gateway to America, Escape Route to Canada: Immigrants Greet a Beacon of
Liberty, John Jervis Creates a New River Route, and a Railroad Goes
Underground
10. Millionaires' Row: The River Castles of J. P. Morgan, John D.
Rockefeller, Jay Gould, and Frederic Church, and the Floating Palaces of
Manhattan's West Side
11. A Forest to Protect a Commercial River: Land Surveyor Verplanck Colvin,
Photographer Seneca Ray Stoddard, and the New York Board of Trade Campaign
to Safeguard the Hudson in the Adirondacks
12. An Interstate Park for the Palisades and the Highlands and a New
Progressive Vision: Elizabeth Vermilye's Women's Clubs, Edward and Mary
Harriman's Park, Mrs. Olmsted's Fresh Air Camp, and Margaret Sage's Charity
13. Over, Under, Across, and Through: Civil Engineers Triumph Over Nature,
Except in New York Harbor
14. Surviving the Depression, Connecting with Nature: FDR's River of
Dignity, Robert Moses's Riverside Drive, and John D. Rockefeller Jr.'s
Parkway
15. The 1960s: Scenic Hudson, Riverkeeper, Clearwater, and The Nature
Conservancy Campaign to Save a Mountain and Revive a "Dead" River
Epilogue: A River of Power, and the Power of Passion
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Prologue: River of Imagining, People of Passion and Dreams
Acknowledgments
1. World's End, World Trade, World River: Henry Hudson's Failed Quest,
Adriaen Van der Donck's Utopian Vision, and the Legend of the Storm Ship
2. The River That Unites, the River That Divides: King George and George
Washington Vie for the Hudson
3. America's River of Empire: Robert Fulton's Folly, Robert Livingston's
Venture Capital, and DeWitt Clinton's Ditch Spark the Rise of New York Port
4. First Stop on the American Tour: Europe Discovers Sylvanus Thayer's West
Point, a Catskills Sunrise, and a River That Defines the American Character
5. America's First Artists and Writers: The Sacred River of Thomas Cole,
the Mythic River of Washington Irving and James Fenimore Cooper
6. The Industrialized River: Gouverneur Kemble's Weapon Works, Henry
Burden's Iron Foundries, and Colonel Stevens's Engine Factory
7. Going up the River for Health and Fun: New York City Journalist N. P.
Willis Survives TB and Discovers an Idle Wild
8. Design with Nature: The Landscape Gardens of A. J. Downing, the
Architecture of A. J. Davis, and the Inspiration for Central Park and
Riverside Drive
9. Gateway to America, Escape Route to Canada: Immigrants Greet a Beacon of
Liberty, John Jervis Creates a New River Route, and a Railroad Goes
Underground
10. Millionaires' Row: The River Castles of J. P. Morgan, John D.
Rockefeller, Jay Gould, and Frederic Church, and the Floating Palaces of
Manhattan's West Side
11. A Forest to Protect a Commercial River: Land Surveyor Verplanck Colvin,
Photographer Seneca Ray Stoddard, and the New York Board of Trade Campaign
to Safeguard the Hudson in the Adirondacks
12. An Interstate Park for the Palisades and the Highlands and a New
Progressive Vision: Elizabeth Vermilye's Women's Clubs, Edward and Mary
Harriman's Park, Mrs. Olmsted's Fresh Air Camp, and Margaret Sage's Charity
13. Over, Under, Across, and Through: Civil Engineers Triumph Over Nature,
Except in New York Harbor
14. Surviving the Depression, Connecting with Nature: FDR's River of
Dignity, Robert Moses's Riverside Drive, and John D. Rockefeller Jr.'s
Parkway
15. The 1960s: Scenic Hudson, Riverkeeper, Clearwater, and The Nature
Conservancy Campaign to Save a Mountain and Revive a "Dead" River
Epilogue: A River of Power, and the Power of Passion
Notes
Bibliography
Index