Baltimore: A Not Too Serious History

Voorkant
JHU Press, 24 jun 1997 - 335 pagina's

A charming and anecdotal account of Baltimore history—as fresh today as it was when first published in 1928.

A teacher of English and English History at the Friends School in Baltimore, Letitia Stockett was inspired to write her whimsical history of the city when a friend told her that nothing much had been done in the way of a history of Baltimore since J. Thomas Scharf's The Chronicles of Baltimore (1874). Rising to the challenge, she spent all of her spare time on the book, telling curious friends and family merely that she "had work to do." Baltimore: A Not Too Serious History was the result, a charming and anecdotal account of the city's history that is as fresh today as it was when first published in 1928.

"Would you know Baltimore? Then put deliberately out of your mind the fact that the town makes more straw hats than any other city in the world. Aesthetically speaking, that is a fearsome thought. Forget, too, that Baltimore is the centre of the oyster packing industry. Worse, far worse than a straw hat is a packed oyster; Baltimoreans ought to know better. In truth they do; they export the tinned bivalve to the unsuspecting, unsophisticated Westerner. These two enterprises are worthy and profitable, but a knowledge of these facts will not help you understand this city any more truly than the study of those long lists of products once diligently conned in school gave you an inkling of Tunis, Singapore and Wilkes-Barre."—from Baltimore: A Not too Serious History

 

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Inhoudsopgave

FOREWORD TO THE 1997 EDITION
9
CHAPTER I
17
CHAPTER II
32
CHAPTER III
47
CHAPTER V
74
CHAPTER VI
94
CHAPTER VII
108
A Vista of the Christmas Tower of Emmanuel Church
286
The Atlantic Locomotive
304
Fort McHenry in 1862
322
Copyright

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Over de auteur (1997)

Letitia Stockett was born in Baltimore in 1884. She attended Eastern High School and graduated from Goucher College in 1904. She taught at the Friends School for thirty years, and is the author of The Hoofs of Pegasus, a collection of poems, as well as America, First, Fast, and Furious. She died in South Duxbury, Massachusetts in 1949.

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