Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 October 2011
In 1962 Sam Bass Warner, Jr., published an important book about suburbanization in late nineteenth-century Boston. Like most influential books, it was timely in its subject, and Warner's scholarly study might be supposed to have built upon the interest that was being generated by numerous popular analyses of contemporary suburbanization and suburban life in post—World War II America. One can indeed find in Streetcar Suburbs the same fundamental preoccupation with the shallowness of communal life and similar diagnoses of the sprawl of single-family homes in homogeneous and militantly residential areas on the periphery of the city, as one finds in say, William H. Whyte's 1956 critique, The Organization Man.' Yet Warner's book was not part of, and did not initiate, a new genre of historical suburban studies. Instead, it served as one of the essential founding texts of what came to be known as the “new urban history”—a large number of scholarly attempts to examine the character and structure of life at the center of the developing big cities of industrializing America. Not the “crabgrass frontier” but the “urban frontier” defined the territory of historical adventure during the 1960s. The metaphor is not, and was not then, entirely an academic one. In 1961 the new President of the United States had called for a “new frontier” of public initiative, and planner Charles Abrams helped his immediate successor expand and locate that initiative with his book, The City Is the Frontier. Without entirely losing interest in the suburbs, scholars, policymakers, and citizens of various kinds suddenly realized the importance of understanding the city and its history.
1. Warner, Sam Bass Jr, Streetcar Suburbs: The Process of Growth in Boston (Cambridge, Mass., 1962)Google Scholar; Whyte, William H., The Organization Man (New York, 1956).Google Scholar
2. Abrams, Charles, The City Is the Frontier (New York, 1965).Google Scholar
3. The five, in order of their discussion in this review, are: Binford, Henry C., The First Suburbs: Residential Communities on the Boston Periphery, 1815–1860 (Chicago, 1985)Google Scholar; Ebner, Michael H., Creating Chicago's North Shore: A Suburban History (Chicago, 1988)Google Scholar; Keating, Ann Durkin, Building Chicago: Suburban Developers and the Creation of a Divided Metropolis (Columbus, Ohio, 1988)Google Scholar; Jackson, Kenneth T., Crabgrass Frontier: The Suburbanization of the United States (New York, 1985)Google Scholar; Fishman, Robert, Bourgeois Utopias: The Rise and Fall of Suburbia (New York, 1987).Google Scholar Other examples of the genre include Teaford, Jon C., City and Suburb: The Political Fragmentation of Metropolitan America: 1850–1970 (Baltimore, 1979)Google Scholar; O'Connor, Carol A., A Sort of Utopia: Scarsdale, 1891–1981 (Albany, 1983)Google Scholar; SclarMatthew Edel, Elliott D. Matthew Edel, Elliott D., and Luria, Daniel, Shaky Palaces: Homeownership and Social Mobility in Boston's Suburbanization [sic] (New York, 1984)Google Scholar; and Stilgoe, John R., Borderland: Origins of the American Suburb, 1820–1939 (New Haven, 1988).Google Scholar