About this book
Understanding Philadelphia's history requires that we understand that nothing is inevitable; history is not made by abstract forces, but by the decisions of real individuals as they conduct their lives. With its insightful analysis and engaging prose, Philadelphia provides an accessible and readable overview of the history of the Quaker City from its founding by William Penn to the deindustrialization and gentrification of the early twenty-first century. Roger Simon asserts that the history of Philadelphia is a story of the efforts to sustain economic prosperity while fulfilling community needs, and the continued tension between those priorities.
Philadelphia devotes considerable attention to the evolving physical development of the city and to the social conditions and class structure of the people. Three dozen maps and illustrations enrich this edition, which has been fully updated and revised to reflect new scholarship on Philadelphia's role in the post-industrial present and the diverse communities that incorporated women and minorities into the economic and social fabric of the city.
Published in association with the Pennsylvania Historical Association
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Information
Table of contents
- Contents
- Editors’ Foreword, by Allen Dieterich-Ward and Beverly C. Tomek
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1. Establishing a Community/Building an Economy: Beginnings to 1800
- 2. Community Good/Manufacturing City: 1800–1865
- 3. Industry Triumphant/Civic Failure: 1865–1930
- 4. Economic Decline/Community Turmoil: 1930–1980
- 5. Struggling toward the Postindustrial City: 1980–2016
- Appendix: Tables
- Notes
- Index
