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Creating Chicago's North Shore : a suburban history
    Ebner, Michael H.
Publisher: University of Chicago Press,
Pub date: 1988.
Pages: xxx, 338 p. :
ISBN: 0226182053
Holdings
Evanston Public Library Main
      Material         Location
977.312 Ebner.M     Book     Adult Non-Fiction - 2nd Floor West
      Book     Adult Non-Fiction - 2nd Floor West
      Book     Adult Non-Fiction - 2nd Floor West
      Book     Adult Non-Fiction - 2nd Floor West
R 977.312 Ebner.M     Reference Material     Adult Reference Collection
R x307.7 Ebner.M     Reference Material     Children's Reference
Evanston Public Library North
      Material         Location
977.312 Ebner.M Oversize     Book     Adult Department
Summary
A handsomely produced thorough history with numerous photos. The author's tracing of the growth of eight distinctive suburban communities in the region of the North Shore gives insight into metropolitan development, telling of the hopeful dreams of early suburbanites and what became of them. Distributed by Syndetic Solutions, Inc.
Library Journal Review
The history of the suburbs has only recently attracted the attention of scholars, yet these two volumes demonstrate that the study of suburbs reveals much about the ideals and realities of American life. Ebner's book, which is a social history of eight towns along Lake Michigan, from Evanston to Waukegan, describes how each developed its own distinct character as wealthy Chicagoans left the city to establish communities suited to a particular set of ideals or preferences. The founders enliven the pages of his book, and their utopian visions, long forgotten, explain somebut not allof the characteristics of the suburb as we know it. Keating's work studies the less-than-utopian vision that lies behind the more troubling aspects of suburban development. Her political history closely examines local government, services, and site development. Bristling with facts about water systems, public health, market services, incorporation, and annexation, and including 30 tables and 12 maps, this book is not for the faint-hearted. But it shows, in no uncertain terms, the role of real estate developers as well as governments in launching the exclusionary, separatist attitudes that today make the relations between cities and their suburbs so difficult. Both books belong in urban history collections; Ebner's will find readers in urban and suburban public libraries. Mary Drake McFeely, Univ. of Georgia Lib., Athens From: Reed Elsevier Inc. Copyright Reed Business Information
CHOICE Review
The development of railroads and mass transit in metropolitan areas in the 19th century made possible the rise of suburbs adjacent to major American cities. Outstanding examples are the eight communities along the shore of Lake Michigan north of Chicago. Stretching like a string of pearls along that lake, Evanston, Wilmette, Kenilworth, Winnetka, Glencoe, Highland Park, Lake Forrest, and Lake Bluff are the subjects of this book. Known jointly as the "North Shore," they were developed by upper-class Chicago residents who wished to escape big-city congestion, crime, and sanitary problems. Ebner recounts the separate histories of these communities up to WW I. He also discusses their common problems and cooperation to reach mutual goals. Smaller communities that were "out of place" on the North Shore, such as Fort Sheridan, the Great Lakes Naval Training Center, and Grosse Pointe, are also covered. This book is thoroughly documented, footnoted, and profusely illustrated. It brings local history to a new high point by setting aside myths and presenting an unbiased, comparative picture of these towns. Public and academic libraries, community college level up. -J. Jackson, Southeastern Louisiana University From: Syndetics Solutions, Inc. Distributed by Syndetic Solutions, Inc.
Table of Contents
   Illustrations
   Acknowledgments
   Introduction: The North Shore as Suburban Network
   Part 1 Metropolitan Outlines, 1833-1865
   1 Before the Railroad
   2 Railroad Suburbs
   Part 2 Metropolitan Growth, 1865-1899
   3 Suburban Windows
   4 Village to Suburb to City—Evanston
   5 Creating the North Shore I
   Part 3 Twentieth-Century Metropolis, 1900-1914
   6 Out of Place
   7 Creating the North Shore II The Sense of Place
   Appendix 1 Population History of the North Shore
   Appendix 2 Who Did, and Didn't, Design Lake Forest?
   Bibliographical Essay: A Reader's Guide to the North Shore
   Notes
   Index
Distributed by Syndetic Solutions, Inc.

Full View From Catalog
Personal Author: Ebner, Michael H.
Title: Creating Chicago's North Shore : a suburban history / Michael H. Ebner.
Publication info: Chicago : University of Chicago Press, 1988.
Physical descrip: xxx, 338 p. : ill. ; 29 cm.
General Note: Includes index.
Bibliography note: Bibliography: p. 247-317.
Held by: CARY DESPLAINES DUNDEE FREMONT GLENCOE LAKEFOREST LAKE_VILLA LINCOLNWD MCHENRY NILES NORTHBROOK PARK_RIDGE PRSPCT_HTS ROUND_LAKE WILMETTE WINNETKA ZIONBENTON CRYSTALAKE EPLMAIN EPLNORTH EPLSOUTH GLENVIEW
Subject term: Suburbs--Illinois--Chicago--History.
Subject term: Suburbs--Illinois--Chicago--Case studies.
Subject term: Suburban life--Illinois--Chicago--History.
Added title: Chicago's North Shore.
Control Number: ocm16873346
ISBN: 0226182053 : $29.95
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