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E-raamat: Asheville: A History

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Asheville, North Carolina, grew from humble beginnings as a hamlet for local livestock handlers to become one of the most culturally and artistically diverse cities in the South. The city experienced a quick rise to prosperity in the late 19th century under the influence of wealthy benefactors including George W. Vanderbilt and E.W. Grove. A devastating downturn during the Great Depression was followed by slow economic revitalization up until the late 1970s. In the 1990s, however Asheville entered boom time, a period that reestablished the city as a popular retreat for tourists, artists, and retirees.

Here in this book is all the fascinating history of Asheville, complete with a rich array of photographs. Multiple appendices reveal details concerning many lesser-known aspects of Asheville's unique history, including city buildings designed by architects Richard Sharp Smith and Douglas D. Ellington, and city projects funded by philanthropist Julian Price.

Arvustused

addictive, fascinating, solidly researched, comprehensible organized, and very, very difficult to leave behind before youve finished itCarolina Mountain Life; essential...impressive...remarkably comprehensive textWNC Magazine; comprehensive...insightfulWestern North Carolina Heritage; the first comprehensive, illustrated history of the city in a generationASJA:Member News; fascinatingGreensboro Libraries; Chase punctuates her history with detail, anecdote, quotes, contemporary newspaper accounts...loads of photos...make this book the best kind of historyHigh Country Press.

Introduction 1(4)
Part I
``The glowing summer-heart of the woods''
5(11)
The Livestock Years
16(15)
The Asheville Style
31(32)
The Vanderbilt Years: Asheville's Gold Standard
63(19)
Fever
82(29)
Part II
``Lion in a cage'': Asheville's Great Depression
111(25)
Sticks and Stones: Race and Architecture in Asheville
136(25)
The Spreading Malaise
161(20)
Part III
Lumbering Phoenix
181(26)
Hoppin' `n' Poppin'
207(16)
The Day After Tomorrow
223(40)
Part IV
Appendix A: Early Asheville Newspaper Sources
239(1)
Appendix B: Cherokee Recipes
240(1)
Appendix C: All Souls Episcopal Church
241(1)
Appendix D: Buildings Designed by Richard Sharp Smith
242(2)
Appendix E: Riverside Cemetery
244(1)
Appendix F: Biltmore Industries
245(2)
Appendix G: Grovemont-on-Swannanoa
247(2)
Appendix H: Land and Forest Reclamation
249(1)
Appendix I: Buildings Designed by Douglas D. Ellington
250(1)
Appendix J: Tuberculosis and Sanitation Concerns
251(5)
Appendix K: Official Schedule of Events of the Seventh Annual Rhododendron Festival, June 11--15, 1934
256(3)
Appendix L: Rayon Production at Enka
259(1)
Appendix M: Impressions of the Program, Negro Music Festival, July 1934
260(1)
Appendix N: From the Julian Price Papers
261(2)
Chapter Notes 263(6)
Bibliography 269(4)
Index 273


Freelance writer Nan K. Chase lives in Asheville, North Carolina. Her work has appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post, Smithsonian, Our State and Southern Living among others.