-
1
-
-
78650506721
-
-
Adams's presentation, "Planning Metropolitan Regions," was given at the Pittsburgh meeting of the National Municipal League (NML) on November 18, 1925
-
Adams's presentation, "Planning Metropolitan Regions," was given at the Pittsburgh meeting of the National Municipal League (NML) on November 18, 1925.
-
-
-
-
2
-
-
0034829525
-
Beyond the crabgrass frontier: Industry and the spread of North American cities, 1850-1950
-
DOI 10.1006/jhge.2000.0266
-
See Richard Walker and Robert D. Lewis, "The Crabgrass Frontier: Industry and the Spread of North American Cities, 1850-1950," Journal of Historical Geography 27 (2001): 3-19, for an evaluation of the expanding range of land uses in the American city. (Pubitemid 32897284)
-
(2001)
Journal of Historical Geography
, vol.27
, Issue.1
, pp. 3-19
-
-
Walker, R.1
Lewis, R.D.2
-
5
-
-
0002123934
-
Neither Global nor Local: 'Glocalization' and the Politics of Scale
-
ed. Kevin Cox (New York: Guilford)
-
See Eric Swyngedouw, "Neither Global nor Local: 'Glocalization' and the Politics of Scale," in Spaces of Globalization: Reasserting the Power of the Local, ed. Kevin Cox (New York: Guilford, 1997), 137-66;
-
(1997)
Spaces of Globalization: Reasserting the Power of the Local
, pp. 137-166
-
-
Swyngedouw, E.1
-
6
-
-
0030548976
-
Spaces of vulnerability: The space of flows and the politics of scale
-
Neil Smith, "Spaces of Vulnerability: The Space of Flows and the Politics of Scale," Critique of Anthropology 16 (1996): 63-77. (Pubitemid 126338726)
-
(1996)
Critique of Anthropology
, vol.16
, Issue.1
, pp. 63-77
-
-
Smith, N.1
-
7
-
-
85127424681
-
-
note
-
Scale is an essential concept in geography, traditionally defined in descriptive terms such as local, regional, and global. Scale has been problematized in recent scholarship that considers the "rescaling" of economic and political relationships, the construction of new relationships within and across scales, and the persisting influence of localism in an increasingly globalizing world. For examples of the practice and debates of this field, see Adam Moore, "Rethinking Scale as a Geographical Category: From Analysis to Practice," Progress in Human Geography 32 (2008): 203-25.
-
-
-
-
8
-
-
33947357817
-
Globalization and the power of rescaled narratives: A case of opposition to mining in Tambogrande, Peru
-
DOI 10.1016/j.polgeo.2006.10.014, PII S0962629806001314
-
For a recent example, see Hårvard Haarstad and Arnt Fløysand, "Globalization and the Power of Rescaled Narratives: A Case of Opposition to Mining in Tambogrande, Peru," Political Geography 26 (2007): 289-308. (Pubitemid 46444647)
-
(2007)
Political Geography
, vol.26
, Issue.3
, pp. 289-308
-
-
Haarstad, H.1
Floysand, A.2
-
9
-
-
85040877237
-
-
Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press
-
See David Ward, Poverty, Ethnicity, and the American City, 1840-1925: Changing Conceptions of the Slum and the Ghetto (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1989). The political machines that had temporarily integrated increasingly disparate urban communities succumbed to charges of inefficiencies and corruption and were unable to respond to the changing urban landscape
-
(1989)
Poverty, Ethnicity, and the American City, 1840-1925: Changing Conceptions of the Slum and the Ghetto
-
-
Ward, D.1
-
12
-
-
70549089074
-
The Birth of Organized City Planning in the United States, 1909-1910
-
See Jon Peterson, "The Birth of Organized City Planning in the United States, 1909-1910," Journal of the American Planning Association 75 (2009): 123-33.
-
(2009)
Journal of the American Planning Association
, vol.75
, pp. 123-133
-
-
Peterson, J.1
-
13
-
-
0003492422
-
-
Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press
-
See Kenneth Finegold, Experts and Politicians (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1995);
-
(1995)
Experts and Politicians
-
-
Finegold, K.1
-
14
-
-
84992785622
-
The Whole City Is Our Laboratory: Harlan Bartholomew and the Production of Urban Knowledge
-
Joseph Heathcott, "The Whole City Is Our Laboratory: Harlan Bartholomew and the Production of Urban Knowledge," Journal of Planning History 4 (2005): 322-55.
-
(2005)
Journal of Planning History
, vol.4
, pp. 322-355
-
-
Heathcott, J.1
-
15
-
-
33846047216
-
-
Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press
-
John Bauman and Edward Muller, Before Renaissance ( Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2006 ).
-
(2006)
Before Renaissance
-
-
Bauman, J.1
Muller, E.2
-
16
-
-
78650432799
-
-
Ibid., 67-78
-
Ibid., 67-78.
-
-
-
-
18
-
-
0036003215
-
Theorizing Change: The Role of Professional Organizations in the Transformation of Instituted Fields
-
Royston Greenwood, Roy Suddaby, and C.R. Hinings, " Theorizing Change: The Role of Professional Organizations in the Transformation of Instituted Fields, " Academy of Management Journal 45 (2002). 58-80.
-
(2002)
Academy of Management Journal
, vol.45
, pp. 58-80
-
-
Greenwood Suddaby, R.R.1
Hinings, C.R.2
-
19
-
-
0038493277
-
-
Lawrence: University Press of Kansas Peterson
-
See Camilla Stivers, Bureau Men, Settlement Women: Constructing Public Administration in the Progressive Era (Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 2000). Peterson, "Birth of Organized City Planning," records the insistence of Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr. that the first National Conference on City Planning and the Congestion Problem should include representation from several membership organizations, including the American Institute of Architects and the League of American Municipalities.
-
(2000)
Bureau Men, Settlement Women: Constructing Public Administration in the Progressive Era
-
-
Stivers, C.1
-
24
-
-
0242436662
-
-
Washington, DC: American Council on Public Affairs. Bureau of Municipal Research researchers traveled to Frankfurt, Germany, to learn new tools for urban management-see Rodgers, Atlantic Crossings
-
Norman Gill, "Municipal Research Bureaus: A Study of the Nation's Leading Citizen-Supported Agencies" (Washington, DC: American Council on Public Affairs, 1944). Bureau of Municipal Research researchers traveled to Frankfurt, Germany, to learn new tools for urban management-see Rodgers, Atlantic Crossings, 67.
-
(1944)
Municipal Research Bureaus: A Study of the Nation's Leading Citizen-Supported Agencies
, pp. 67
-
-
Gill, N.1
-
25
-
-
78650467812
-
Stivers, Bureau Men
-
Stivers, Bureau Men, Settlement Women.
-
Settlement Women
-
-
-
26
-
-
0442274387
-
-
Presidential Address Association of American Geographers
-
David Ward, " Presidential Address: Social Reform, Social Surveys, and the Discovery of the Modern City," Annals, Association of American Geographers 80 (1990). 491-503.
-
(1990)
Social Reform, Social Surveys, and the Discovery of the Modern City," Annals
, vol.80
, pp. 491-503
-
-
Ward, D.1
-
27
-
-
0040040691
-
-
Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press
-
The Pittsburgh Survey was published in six volumes by the Russell Sage Foundation between 1909 and 1914 and detailed aspects of life in the industrial city including working conditions, life in mill towns, and gender relations. See Maurine Greenwald and Margo Anderson, eds., Pittsburgh Surveyed (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1996) for accounts of the survey's content and significance.
-
(1996)
Pittsburgh Surveyed
-
-
Greenwald, M.1
Anderson, M.2
-
29
-
-
0343236898
-
-
New York: National Municipal League
-
For an overview of the history and research of the NML, see Frank Stewart, A Half-Century of Municipal Reform: The History of the National Municipal League (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1950); and Paul Studenski, The Government of Metropolitan Areas in the United States (New York: National Municipal League, 1930).
-
(1930)
The Government of Metropolitan Areas in the United States
-
-
Studenski, P.1
-
30
-
-
0006408381
-
-
New York: Harper & Row
-
Debates over the merits of regional versus local governance were not new; arguments over land ownership and control had occurred since the early European colonization of America-see Sam Warner, The Urban Wilderness-A History of the American City (New York: Harper & Row, 1972).
-
(1972)
The Urban Wilderness-A History of the American City
-
-
Warner, S.1
-
31
-
-
0028551593
-
The Scientific Management of Urban Space: Professional City Planning and the Legacy of Progressive Reform
-
J.D. Fairfield, " The Scientific Management of Urban Space: Professional City Planning and the Legacy of Progressive Reform, " Journal of Urban History 20 (1994). 179-204.
-
(1994)
Journal of Urban History
, vol.20
, pp. 179-204
-
-
Fairfield, J.D.1
-
32
-
-
0342900518
-
The Regional Plan and the Transformation of the Industrial Metropolis
-
ed. David Ward and Olivier Zunz (New York: Russell Sage)
-
Progressive Era reform principles infiltrated Los Angeles and New York, supporting metropolitan solutions in response to perceived inefficiencies in local governance-see Robert Fishman, "The Regional Plan and the Transformation of the Industrial Metropolis," in The Landscape of Modernity: Essays on New York City, 1900-1940, ed. David Ward and Olivier Zunz (New York: Russell Sage, 1992), 106-25
-
(1992)
The Landscape of Modernity: Essays on New York City, 1900-1940
, pp. 106-125
-
-
Fishman, R.1
-
34
-
-
0004050093
-
-
New York: Regional Plan of New York and Its Environs
-
Based on the fifty-mile perimeter surrounding New York City Hall, New York's Regional Plan would include an area of some 5,528 square miles and create a metropolitan area with a population of 8,979,055-see F. Delano, W. D. Forest, et al., The Graphic Regional Plan-Atlas and Description (New York: Regional Plan of New York and Its Environs, 1929), 21. In comparison, the metropolitan charter for Allegheny County captured an area of 724 square miles and 1,600,000 people.
-
(1929)
The Graphic Regional Plan-Atlas and Description
, pp. 21
-
-
Delano, F.1
Forest, W.D.2
-
35
-
-
78650429537
-
-
Casting urban fragmentation as a problem presumed the superiority of metropolitan governance, although this remains a contentious and unclear premise-see Pittsburgh: RAND
-
Casting urban fragmentation as a problem presumed the superiority of metropolitan governance, although this remains a contentious and unclear premise-see Sally Sleeper, Henry Willis, et al., Measuring and Understanding Economic Interdependence in Allegheny County (Pittsburgh: RAND, 2004).
-
(2004)
Measuring and Understanding Economic Interdependence in Allegheny County
-
-
Sleeper, S.1
Willis, H.2
-
36
-
-
78650487688
-
-
See Studenski, Government of Metropolitan Areas
-
See Studenski, Government of Metropolitan Areas.
-
-
-
-
37
-
-
0009182461
-
-
Philadelphia: Temple University Press
-
See Kenneth Fox, Better City Government-Innovation in American Urban Politics, 1850-1937 (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1977). Consolidation attempts had some success during the Progressive Era as land annexed to central cities increased steadily between 1890 and 1930. In the twenty-year interval between 1890 and 1910, central cities increased their land area through annexation by 59 percent. In the next twenty years, central cities expanded their land area by 36 percent. However, these increases were not sufficient to keep pace with the centrifugal population shifts causing the expansion of metropolitan areas surrounding the central cities.
-
(1977)
Better City Government-Innovation in American Urban Politics, 1850-1937
-
-
Fox, K.1
-
38
-
-
78650492579
-
-
note
-
Reed was a member of the NML Committee on Metropolitan Government that had assisted with Studenski's capstone report. Also present on this committee was Morris Knowles, a Pittsburgh-based engineer and leader in the Civic Club of Allegheny County effort to bring metropolitan government to Allegheny County.
-
-
-
-
39
-
-
78650477551
-
-
note
-
Political consolidation of Allegheny County's municipalities had been favored by Pittsburgh's political leaders since the 1890s as a means to enable more efficient planning-see Bauman and Muller, Before Renaissance.
-
-
-
-
40
-
-
0001914596
-
The Pittsburgh Survey and 'Greater Pittsburgh'-A Muddled Metropolitan Geography
-
Pittsburgh Surveyed, ed. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press
-
See Edward Muller, "The Pittsburgh Survey and 'Greater Pittsburgh'-A Muddled Metropolitan Geography," in Pittsburgh Surveyed, ed. Maurine Greenwald and Margo Anderson (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1996), 69-87.
-
(1996)
Maurine Greenwald and Margo Anderson
, pp. 69-87
-
-
Muller, E.1
-
42
-
-
61249648512
-
Gender and Urban Political Reform: The City Club and the Women's City Club of Chicago in the Progressive Era
-
Maureen Flanagan, "Gender and Urban Political Reform: The City Club and the Women's City Club of Chicago in the Progressive Era," American Historical Review 95 (1990). 1032-50.
-
(1990)
American Historical Review
, vol.95
, pp. 1032-50
-
-
Flanagan, M.1
-
43
-
-
78650437078
-
Civic Leaders and Environmental Reform: The Pittsburgh Survey and Urban Planning
-
ed. Maurine Greenwald and Margo Anderson (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press
-
See John Bauman and M. Spratt, "Civic Leaders and Environmental Reform: The Pittsburgh Survey and Urban Planning," in Pittsburgh Surveyed, ed. Maurine Greenwald and Margo Anderson (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1996), 153-69.
-
(1996)
Pittsburgh Surveyed
, pp. 153-169
-
-
Bauman, J.1
Spratt, M.2
-
44
-
-
0039597677
-
-
Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press
-
Franklin Toker, Pittsburgh-An Urban Portrait ( Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1986 ).
-
(1986)
Pittsburgh-An Urban Portrait
-
-
Toker, F.1
-
46
-
-
78650445580
-
-
note
-
The Twentieth Century Club divested itself of direct involvement in philanthropic enterprises, as they feared it would take away from their core mission to create "an organized centre for women's work, thought and action: advancing her interests, promoting science, literature and art; and for providing a quiet place of meeting for its members" (Twentieth Century Club Archives, Pittsburgh). Independence from the Twentieth Century Club enabled men to join the Civic Club.
-
-
-
-
48
-
-
12144270541
-
Reuben discusses the citizenship curriculum of the National Education Association in "beyond Politics: Community Civics in the Redefinition of Citizenship in the progressive era
-
Julie A. Reuben discusses the citizenship curriculum of the National Education Association in "Beyond Politics: Community Civics in the Redefinition of Citizenship in the Progressive Era." History of Education Quarterly 37 (1997). 399-420.
-
(1997)
History of Education Quarterly
, vol.37
, pp. 399-420
-
-
Julie, A.1
-
49
-
-
78650492104
-
-
Civic Club of Allegheny County, January 29, Archives Service Center, University of Pittsburgh
-
Board of Directors Minutes, Civic Club of Allegheny County, January 29, 1909, Archives Service Center, University of Pittsburgh.
-
(1909)
Board of Directors Minutes
-
-
-
50
-
-
78650475782
-
-
note
-
J. Horace McFarland, president of the American Civic Association, corresponded with the Civic Club during the first three decades of the twentieth century on several matters, including billboard control, urban planning, and public relations. Civic Club secretary H. Marie Dermitt considered McFarland a mentor and the American Civic Association an important organization for shaping opinions on reform, writing "The more I think of the American Civic Association as a propaganda organization, the more I believe it will be doing a great service and there are a number of matters which now are coming up that they could promote" (Personal Correspondence, PA Archives-Harrrisburg, Dermitt to McFarland, 4/23/1918).
-
-
-
-
52
-
-
78650485518
-
-
Civic Club of Allegheny County Archives Service Center, University of Pittsburgh.
-
Board of Directors Minutes, Civic Club of Allegheny County, February 4, 1907, Archives Service Center, University of Pittsburgh.
-
(1907)
Board of Directors Minutes
-
-
-
53
-
-
61249380338
-
-
November 18
-
Pittsburgh Dispatch, November 18, 1908, 5.
-
(1908)
Pittsburgh Dispatch
, pp. 5
-
-
-
54
-
-
78650507154
-
-
Civic Club of Allegheny County Archives Service Center, University of Pittsburgh
-
Special Taxation Study Committee Report (Civic Club of Allegheny County, 1917). Archives Service Center, University of Pittsburgh.
-
(1917)
Special Taxation Study Committee Report
-
-
-
56
-
-
78650474435
-
-
Letter from Alex Dunbar to Miss H. M. Dermitt, Civic Club of Allegheny County Correspondence, August 6, 1920, Archives Service Center, University of Pittsburgh.
-
Letter from Alex Dunbar to Miss H. M. Dermitt, Civic Club of Allegheny County Correspondence, August 6, 1920, Archives Service Center, University of Pittsburgh.
-
-
-
-
57
-
-
78650466426
-
-
note
-
Knowles was a member of the Pittsburgh Chamber of Commerce and several other local commissions. Trained as a civil engineer, he moved to Pittsburgh in 1897 to lead the construction of the Pittsburgh Filtration Plant. After this project was completed he focused on his consulting practice and lectured on the history and prospect of regional planning.
-
-
-
-
58
-
-
78650468238
-
-
Civic Club of Allegheny County Archives Service Center, University of Pittsburgh
-
Greater Pittsburgh Committee Minutes, Civic Club of Allegheny County, 1920, Archives Service Center, University of Pittsburgh.
-
(1920)
Greater Pittsburgh Committee Minutes
-
-
-
59
-
-
78650452184
-
-
Archives Service Center, University of Pittsburgh
-
Alex Dunbar, Civic Club of Allegheny County, October 12, 1920, Archives Service Center, University of Pittsburgh.
-
(1920)
Civic Club of Allegheny County
-
-
Dunbar, A.1
-
60
-
-
78650501710
-
-
Letter from Alex Dunbar to Morris Knowles, Civic Club of Allegheny County Correspondence, October 14, 1920, Archives Service Center, University of Pittsburgh.
-
Letter from Alex Dunbar to Morris Knowles, Civic Club of Allegheny County Correspondence, October 14, 1920, Archives Service Center, University of Pittsburgh.
-
-
-
-
63
-
-
78650432323
-
-
note
-
Joseph T. Miller, who was also the leader of the League of Boroughs and Townships of Allegheny County (LBT). Miller's chairmanship of the metropolitan commission was in stark contrast to his earlier opposition to anything that diluted local municipal control. His participation on the commission may have been intended to safeguard the autonomy of Allegheny County's municipalities.
-
-
-
-
64
-
-
78650444338
-
-
Civic Club of Allegheny County February 26, Archives Service Center, University of Pittsburgh.
-
Board of Directors Minutes, Civic Club of Allegheny County, February 26, 1926, Archives Service Center, University of Pittsburgh.
-
(1926)
Board of Directors Minutes
-
-
-
66
-
-
78650443443
-
-
The four cities were Pittsburgh, McKeesport, Wilkinsburg, and Duquesne.
-
The four cities were Pittsburgh, McKeesport, Wilkinsburg, and Duquesne.
-
-
-
-
67
-
-
78650500066
-
-
Civic Club of Allegheny County Archives Service Center, University of Pittsburgh
-
Board of Directors Minutes, Civic Club of Allegheny County, March 22, 1929, Archives Service Center, University of Pittsburgh.
-
(1929)
Board of Directors Minutes
-
-
-
68
-
-
78650449564
-
-
Archives Service Center, University of Pittsburgh.
-
Municipal Consolidation Commission minutes, February 28, 1925, Archives Service Center, University of Pittsburgh.
-
(1925)
Municipal Consolidation Commission minutes
-
-
-
70
-
-
78650486837
-
-
Civic Club of Allegheny County, November 2 Archives Service Center, University of Pittsburgh
-
Greater Pittsburgh Committee Minutes, Civic Club of Allegheny County, November 2, 1926, Archives Service Center, University of Pittsburgh.
-
(1926)
Greater Pittsburgh Committee Minutes
-
-
-
71
-
-
78650484206
-
-
Civic Club of Allegheny County, February 1 Archives Service Center, University of Pittsburgh.
-
Board of Directors Minutes, Civic Club of Allegheny County, February 1, 1927, Archives Service Center, University of Pittsburgh.
-
(1927)
Board of Directors Minutes
-
-
-
72
-
-
78650502159
-
-
In 1929 Allegheny County had four cities, seventy-four boroughs, twenty-seven first-class townships and seventeen second-class townships.
-
In 1929 Allegheny County had four cities, seventy-four boroughs, twenty-seven first-class townships and seventeen second-class townships.
-
-
-
-
74
-
-
78650435368
-
-
Ibid.; Lubove, Twentieth Century Pittsburgh, 100. Their assertions are based on H. Marie Dermitt's retrospective analysis, "Metropolitan Growing Pains in Allegheny County," National Municipal Review 29 (September 1940): 580-81
-
Ibid.; Lubove, Twentieth Century Pittsburgh, 100. Their assertions are based on H. Marie Dermitt's retrospective analysis, "Metropolitan Growing Pains in Allegheny County," National Municipal Review 29 (September 1940): 580-81.
-
-
-
-
75
-
-
78650469163
-
-
June 13, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, June 14, 1929, 17
-
Presentation on the Metropolitan Plan made to the Civic Club of Wilkinsburg, June 13, 1929, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, June 14, 1929, 17.
-
(1929)
Presentation on the Metropolitan Plan made to the Civic Club of Wilkinsburg
-
-
-
76
-
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0004352125
-
-
Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press for the broader context of germ theory and the heightened awareness of hygiene during the Progressive Era. Harold Platt analyzes the place specific policy treatment of sanitation issues in "'Clever Microbes': Bacteriology and Sanitary Technology in Manchester and Boston during the Progressive Era," Osiris, 2nd Series 19 (2004): 149-66
-
See Nancy Tomes, The Gospel of Germs (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1998), for the broader context of germ theory and the heightened awareness of hygiene during the Progressive Era. Harold Platt analyzes the place specific policy treatment of sanitation issues in "'Clever Microbes': Bacteriology and Sanitary Technology in Manchester and Boston during the Progressive Era," Osiris, 2nd Series 19 (2004): 149-66.
-
(1998)
The Gospel of Germs
-
-
Tomes, N.1
-
79
-
-
33846047216
-
-
for a discussion of the ill-fated plans for a comprehensive subway system in downtown Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania voters had rejected the proposed benefits assessment plan in November 1928 that would have funded construction of the subway
-
See Bauman and Muller, Before Renaissance, 169-80, for a discussion of the ill-fated plans for a comprehensive subway system in downtown Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania voters had rejected the proposed benefits assessment plan in November 1928 that would have funded construction of the subway.
-
Before Renaissance
, pp. 169-180
-
-
Bauman1
Muller2
-
80
-
-
78650475781
-
-
June 14
-
Daily News, June 14, 1929, 6.
-
(1929)
Daily News
, pp. 6
-
-
-
81
-
-
0003892146
-
-
Letter to the editor of the Daily News, May 9, 1929, 6 Charlotte: University of North Carolina Press
-
Letter to the editor of the Daily News, May 9, 1929, 6. See Philip Jenkins, Hoods and Shirts-The Extreme Right in Pennsylvania, 1925-1950 (Charlotte: University of North Carolina Press, 1997). Jenkins notes that thirty-three Klaverns were located in Allegheny County. Klan antipathy toward metropolitan plans may have been rooted in a Protestant nativism, which rejected the social changes being promoted by nonlocal elites.
-
(1997)
Hoods and Shirts-The Extreme Right in Pennsylvania, 1925-1950
-
-
Jenkins, P.1
-
86
-
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78650489088
-
-
note
-
Letter from H. Marie Dermitt to Herman Kehrli, Civic Club of Allegheny County Correspondence, June 28, 1929, Archives Service Center, University of Pittsburgh. Dermitt was a leading member of the Civic Club of Allegheny County and of other urban reform organizations. She served on President Hoover's 1931 Conference on Home Building and Home Ownership and was later to become director of the American Planning and Civic Association and served as secretary for the National Association of Civic Secretaries.
-
-
-
-
88
-
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78650442540
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Lawrence was Democratic county chairman and future mayor of Pittsburgh
-
David L. Lawrence was Democratic county chairman and future mayor of Pittsburgh. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, June 12, 1929, 8.
-
(1929)
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
, pp. 8
-
-
David, L.1
-
89
-
-
78650470358
-
-
note
-
The next thirty years would not allow for the resurrection of serious consolidation discussions in Allegheny County because of the Great Depression, World War, and decline in the local steel industry. As noted in the introduction, consolidation is back on the agenda in twenty-first-century Allegheny County.
-
-
-
-
91
-
-
78650450454
-
-
note
-
Miller continued to serve as chairman of the LBT and advocated for a greater Pittsburgh until his death in 1935. Morris Knowles would later serve on the NML Committee on Metropolitan Government and as chairman for the City Planning Division of the American Society of Civil Engineers. Dermitt also remained nationally active, serving as director of the American Planning and Civic Association and secretary of the National Association of Civic Secretaries.
-
-
-
-
92
-
-
78650502577
-
-
note
-
The urban reformer's dream of metropolitan government for southwestern Pennsylvania would languish after 1929. Future cohorts of urban reformers would periodically consider city-county consolidation, but these efforts were derailed by the Great Depression, the Second World War, regional industrial decline, and entrenched parochialism. Advocates of efficient and regional government eventually eliminated duplicative elected offices and successfully lobbied for the functional consolidation of urban services, but by 2008 Allegheny County consisted of 130 independent municipalities with varying degrees of socioeconomic health.
-
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