Victorian CitiesA comparative study in urban history, Victorian Cities examines the 19th-century history of four developing cities in England in a period of rapid growth, with chapters on London and Melbourne and references to Los Angeles and Chicago as well. |
Contents
Foreword by Andrew and Lynn Hollen Lees | i |
Preface | xv |
Introduction II | 11 |
Victorian Attitudes | 59 |
Manchester Symbol of a New Age | 88 |
Leeds a Study in Civic Pride | 139 |
The Making of a Civic Gospel | 184 |
The Growth of a New Community | 241 |
Melbourne a Victorian Community Overseas | 277 |
London the World City | 311 |
Old Cities and New | 361 |
385 | |
401 | |
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Common terms and phrases
American Anti-Corn Law League architecture Association Australian Barrow-in-Furness Beatrice Webb became Birmingham Bolckow borough Bradford Briggs Britain British Brodrick building called capital centre Chamberlain Chartist Chicago Church civic gospel classes Cobden Committee Conservative contrast corn laws Corporation councillors critics crowded culture described Disraeli districts early economic elected England English Exhibition Fabian growth Henry Bolckow historian houses improvement increased inhabitants interest Joseph Chamberlain labour late late-Victorian later League Leeds Leeds Town Hall Leicester Liberal live Liverpool London County Council Manchester Manchester's manufacturers Mayor Melbourne ment metropolis metropolitan mid-Victorian middle Middlesbrough nineteenth century Nonconformist novels Parliament party political population pride problems provincial cities Queen Victoria's reign Radical railway Saltaire sanitary School Sheffield social society Street suburbs Sydney tion Town Council Town Hall trade urban history Victorian age Victorian cities W. E. Forster working-class writers wrote York