Cincinnati's Golden AgeArcadia Publishing, 2005年8月3日 - 128页 In its golden age, Cincinnati was a leader in industry and culture. Europeans immigrated into the city to fill jobs, and the rural landscape was developing into suburbs. Incline railways provided access to hilltop neighborhoods, and for the first time, the middle class could afford to move to outlying areas, commuting to work in the city. Breweries, soap manufacturers, meat packing plants, and other industries flourished, as supplies and products were distributed throughout Cincinnati along the Miami-Erie Canalsteamboats crowded the Ohio River wharves. The city thrived during the decades surrounding the turn of the 19th century. |
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architect artist Author’s Collection background beer Bellevue Incline boat brick building built Burnet Woods canal Carew Tower Cincinnati Art Academy Cincinnati Art Club Cincinnati Art Museum City of Cincinnati city’s Clifton Coney Island construction corner courthouse riot Covenant First Presbyterian Deak Collection decorated designed by Hannaford designed by James Eden Park Elm Street feet Fernbank Dam Findlay Market flood floor fountain Frank Duveneck Frank Wilmes German glass negatives Greenup Street Hannaford & Sons Hospital immigrants Island Queen James Garfield John Kentucky Lake Liberty Street Lincoln Park lock Lockland married McLaughlin McMicken Avenue Mill Creek Valley Mohawk Music Hall neighborhood Ohio River original Over~the~Rhine painting Photograph by William Pike’s Opera House Race Street reservoir Roman Catholic Church Rookwood Pottery Rose Ann Samuel Hannaford Schmidt Schoenberger’s steamboat Street Bridge style towpath Vine Street West William H Wise Temple