Synopses & Reviews
Boston A Topographical History Third Enlarged Edition Walter Muir Whitehill and Lawrence W. Kennedy This urbane and delightful book covering more than 300 years of the course of Boston's history has now been enlarged with an account of the city's new urban design, architecture, and historic preservation and is richly illustrated with 32 additional photographs and drawings. In the last three decades momentous changes have visited this colonial city made modern. Lawrence Kennedy portrays the Boston that preserved much of the intimacy of the remembered place while creating a dramatic new skyline. Boston has been remarkably transformed while keeping human the features of a beloved city. There have been many books written about Boston, but none with more information so charmingly and accurately written ... There are riches packed between the hard covers of this book, excellently conceived and excellently created. --Boston Globe A lively history of the city from its founding ... Whitehill clarifies such mysteries as the name Tremont, which refers to the three hills--Pemberton, Beacon, and Mount Vernon--that once stood where the now much-reduced Beacon Hill remains. With this book, graced with useful old maps and engravings, you can understand that Canal Street followed the bank of Mill Creek, Causeway Street was once a causeway across the old mill pond, and West Hill Place (near Charles Circle) was once a small hill by the Back Bay. --David Mehegan, Boston Globe Magazine The late Walter Muir Whitehill was the Director of the Boston Athenaeum. Lawrence W. Kennedy is Professor of History at the University of Scranton and author of Planning the City upon a Hill: Boston since 1630.Simultaneous editions May 61⁄ 4 x 91⁄ 4 148 illus. 416 pp. cloth: ISBN 0-674-00267-9 (WHIBOR) $35.00 (#21.95 UK) paper: ISBN 0-674-00268-7 (WHIBOY) $16.95 (#10.50 UK) American History/Urban History/New England
Review
Reviews of the previous edition:
"There have been many books written about Boston, but none with more information so charmingly and accurately written...[There are] riches packed between the hard covers of this book, excellently conceived and excellently created."
--Boston Globe"[Boston: A Topographical History] is a lively history of the city from its founding up through the mid-1960s, the age of the so-called New Boston. Whitehill clarifies such mysteries as the name Tremont, which refers to the three hills--Pemberton, Beacon, and Mount Vernon--that once stood where the now much-reduced Beacon Hill remains. With this book, graced with useful old maps and engravings, you can understand that Canal Street followed the bank of Mill Creek, Causeway Street was once a causeway across the old mill pond, and West Hill Place (near Charles Circle) was once a small hill by the Back Bay."
--David Mehegan, Boston Globe Magazine"Short, living, and admirably illustrated...What we have is a most learned and entertaining guide to the past and present of Boston."
--Times Literary Supplement"Over the years Boston has played an important role in American history and consequently a topographical history of the city is of more than local interest...In an informed and witty manner, [Whitehill] traces the history of Boston by means of the physical and resultant social changes which have affected the city...[this history has been] delightfully...told in this attractive book."
--James J. Heslin, New York Historical Society Quarterly"A good companion, pleasingly written, informative and entertaining, and copiously illustrated."
--Nicholas B. Wainwright, New England Quarterly"Whitehill's scholarship is both profound and far-reaching...In short, this is an admirable contribution to the growing literature of American urbanism."
--Leonard K. Eaton, Progressive ArchitectureReview
Over the years Boston has played an important role in American history and consequently a topographical history of the city is of more than local interest...In an informed and witty manner, [Whitehill] traces the history of Boston by means of the physical and resultant social changes which have affected the city...[this history has been] delightfully...told in this attractive book. Times Literary Supplement
Review
Whitehill's scholarship is both profound and far-reaching...In short, this is an admirable contribution to the growing literature of American urbanism.
Review
There have been many books written about Boston, but none with more information so charmingly and accurately written...[There are] riches packed between the hard covers of this book, excellently conceived and excellently created. Boston Globe
Review
"[Boston: A Topographical History] is a lively history of the city from its founding up through the mid-1960s, the age of the so-called New Boston. Whitehill clarifies such mysteries as the name Tremont, which refers to the three hills--Pemberton, Beacon, and Mount Vernon--that once stood where the now much-reduced Beacon Hill remains. With this book, graced with useful old maps and engravings, you can understand that Canal Street followed the bank of Mill Creek, Causeway Street was once a causeway across the old mill pond, and West Hill Place (near Charles Circle) was once a small hill by the Back Bay. H-Net Reviews
Review
A good companion, pleasingly written, informative and entertaining, and copiously illustrated.
Review
Over the years Boston has played an important role in American history and consequently a topographical history of the city is of more than local interest...In an informed and witty manner, [Whitehill] traces the history of Boston by means of the physical and resultant social changes which have affected the city...[this history has been] delightfully...told in this attractive book.
Review
The third edition to Boston: A Topographical History appears forty years after Walter Muir Whitehill's original text, brought up-to-date by Lawrence Kennedy. The underlying theme of the book remains remarkably important...There is a truly impressive feat here. Kennedy and Whitehill have documented incredible physical changes over nearly four hundred years. The book is wonderfully illustrated...well-researched and accessible. It not only provides an overarching narrative of the history of the city of Boston, it shows how cities in general adapt, alter, and preserve their surroundings. Michael Mazzano
Review
Short, living, and admirably illustrated...What we have is a most learned and entertaining guide to the past and present of Boston. David Mehegan - Boston Globe Magazine
Synopsis
This urbane and delightful book covering more than 300 years of the course of Boston's history has now been enlarged with an account of the city's new urban design, architecture, and historic preservation and is richly illustrated with 32 additional photographs and drawings. In the last three decades momentous changes have visited this colonial city made modern. Lawrence Kennedy portrays the Boston that preserved much of the intimacy of the remembered place while creating a dramatic new skyline. Boston has been remarkably transformed while keeping human the features of a beloved city.
About the Author
The late Walter Muir Whitehill was the Director of the Boston Athenaeum.Lawrence W. Kennedy is Professor of History at the University of Scranton and author of Planning the City upon a Hill: Boston since 1630.
University of Scranton
Table of Contents
1. "Fittest for such as can trade into England"
2. The Eighteenth Century
3. The Boston of Bulfinch
4. Cutting Down the Hills to Fill the Coves
5. Railroads and Immigrants
6. The Flight from the South End
7. The Filling of the Back Bay
8. The Westward Movement
9. A Decade of Renewal
10. A Beacon Once More
11. Toward the New Millennium
Appendix
Notes
Index