Nature's Metropolis: Chicago and the Great West

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Nature's Metropolis: Chicago and the Great West

Author: William Cronon
Publisher: W. W. Norton
Copyright: 1992
Pages: 556
Cover Price: $ 19.95

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In a fresh approach that links urban and frontier history, Cronon explores the relationship between Chicago, during the period 1848-1893, and the entire West, tracing the path between an urban market and the natural systems that supply it. Examining commodity flows--meat, grain, lumber--and the revolution in transportation and distribution, the book chronicles changes in the landscape: cattle replace buffalo; corn and wheat supplant prairie grasses; entire forests fall to the ax. Thus Wyoming cattle, Iowa corn and Wisconsin white pine come together in Chicago. City and countryside develop in tandem. Cronon notes that gateway cities are a peculiar feature of North American frontier settlements and the chief colonizers of the Western landscape.

He compares the world of rural merchants in the pre- and post-railroad eras, and cites the McCormick reaper works to illustrate the sale of manufactured goods to the hinterland. The culmination of this dynamic period is in the Columbian Exposition of 1893. Readers interested in the growth of capitalism will find this an engrossing study.

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Background Information

Chicago, Illinois, is the largest city on the Great Lakes.