Urban Masses and Moral Order in America, 1820-1920

Urban Masses and Moral Order in America, 1820-1920

by Paul Boyer
Urban Masses and Moral Order in America, 1820-1920
Urban Masses and Moral Order in America, 1820-1920

Urban Masses and Moral Order in America, 1820-1920

by Paul Boyer

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Overview

For over a century, dark visions of moral collapse and social disintegration in American cities spurred an anxious middle class to search for ways to restore order. In this important book, Paul Boyer explores the links between the urban reforms of the Progressive era and the long efforts of prior generations to tame the cities. He integrates the ideologies of urban crusades with an examination of the careers and the mentalities of a group of vigorous activists, including Lyman Beecher; the pioneers of the tract societies and Sunday schools; Charles Loring Brace of the Children's Aid Society; Josephine Shaw Lowell of the Charity Organization movement; the father of American playgrounds, Joseph Lee; and the eloquent city planner Daniel Hudson Burnham.

Boyer describes the early attempts of Jacksonian evangelicals to recreate in the city the social equivalent of the morally homogeneous village; he also discusses later strategies that tried to exert a moral influence on urban immigrant families by voluntarist effort, including, for instance, the Charity Organizations' "friendly visitors." By the 1890s there had developed two sharply divergent trends in thinking about urban planning and social control: the bleak assessment that led to coercive strategies and the hopeful evaluation that emphasized the importance of environmental betterment as a means of urban moral control.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674028623
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 07/01/2009
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 432
File size: 6 MB

About the Author

Paul Boyer, Merle Curti Professor of History at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.

Table of Contents

Contents
PART ONE The Jacksonian Era
1. The Urban Threat Emerges: A Strategy Takes Shape
2. The Tract Societies: Transmitting a Traditional Morality by Untraditional Means
3. The Sunday School in the City: Patterned Order in a Disorderly Setting
4. Urban Moral Reform in the Early Republic: Some Concluding Reflections
PART TWO The Mid-Century Decades: Years of Frustration and Innovation
5. Heightened Concern, Varied Responses
6. Narrowing the Problem: Slum Dwellers and Street Urchins
7. Young Men and the City: The Emergence of the YMCA
PART THREE The Gilded Age: Urban Moral Control in a Turbulent Time
8. “The Ragged Edge of Anarchy”: The Emotional Context of Urban Social Control in the Gilded Age
9. American Protestantism and the Moral Challenge of the Industrial City
10. Building Character among the Urban Poor: The Charity Organization Movement
11. The Urban Moral Awakening of the 1890s
12. The Two Faces of Urban Moral Reform in the 1890s
PART FOUR The Progressives and the City: Common Concerns, Divergent Strategies
13. Battling the Saloon and the Brothel: The Great Coercive Crusades
14. One Last, Decisive Struggle: The Symbolic Component of the Great Coercive Crusades
15. Positive Environmentalism: The Ideological Underpinnings
16. Housing, Parks, and Playgrounds: Positive Environmentalism in Action
17. The Civic Ideal and the Urban Moral Order
18. The Civic Ideal Made Real: The Moral Vision of the Progressive City Planners
19. Positive Environmentalism and the Urban Moral-Control Tradition: Contrasts and Continuities
20. Getting Right with Gesellschaft: The Decay of the Urban Moral-Control Impulse in the 1920s and After
Notes
Index
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