by RoyRosenzweig (Author), ElizabethBlackmar (Author)
This exemplary social history (Kirkus Reviews) is the first full-scale account of Central Park ever published. Elizabeth Blackmar and Roy Rosenzweig tell the story of Central Park's people-the merchants and landowners who launched the project; the immigrant and African-American residents who were displaced by the park; the politicians, gentlemen, and artists who disputed its design and operation; the German gardeners, Irish laborers, and Yankee engineers who built it; and the generations of New Yorkers for whom Central Park was their only backyard. In tracing the park's history, Blackmar and Rosenzweig give us the history of New York, and bring to life larger issues about the meaning of the word public in a democratic society.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 623
Edition: New edition
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Published: 03 Sep 1998
ISBN 10: 0801497515
ISBN 13: 9780801497513
Book Overview: Winner of the 1993 Historic Preservation Book Award and the 1993 Urban History Association Prize for Best Book on North American Urban History.
Original and provocative. . . . A deeply felt celebration of the role of public space. -Robert Fishman, New York Times Book Review
Ambitious and adventurous. . . . A surprising and deeply social account of the park's contentious past. A powerful historical resource for thinking about the shape American public spaces have taken. -Susan G. Davis, The Nation
Prodigiously researched, eloquent. An outstanding study of the evolution of Manhattan's Central Park. -Publishers Weekly (starred review)