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SUBURBANIZATION
IN THE UNITED STATES
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The term suburb
commonly refers to an urban district on the outskirts of a city that grows
more
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rapidly than its interior. The process of
suburbanization began within the second quarter of the
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nineteenth century. The
emergence of the industrial city at that time
was spurred largely by
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developments in transportation. Until
then the typical city had been a compact cluster of small
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5
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buildings. People
traveled primarily on foot, and goods were moved by horse and cart.
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The early factories of
the industrial age, built in the 1830's and 1840's, were located along
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waterways and near railheads at the edges
of cities. Housing was needed for the thousands of
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people drawn by the
prospect of employment, so within a short time, the factories were surrounded
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10
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by mill towns of apartments and row
houses that abutted the older, central cities. In response, many
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cities annexed these
suburbs. In 1854, for example, the city of Philadelphia legally took over
mos
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of the county around it, and the
governments of Chicago and New York followed suit. Indeed, most
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great cities of the
United States grew as they did only by incorporating the suburban
communities
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along their borders.
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15
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→ With the acceleration of industrial growth came
crowding and social stresses. When the first
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commercially successful
electric traction line
was developed in Boston, it revolutionized urban
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transportation by alleviating these
problems. Transportation had previously been provided by a
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large network of
horse-drawn lines that had many disadvantages. First, caring for the horses
was
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expensive and labor-intensive.
Additionally, the large amounts of waste left on the roads were a
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public health hazard.
The benefits of a new form of transportation based not on horsepower but
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electric power were immediately obvious.
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Not only were electric streetcars
cleaner, cheaper, and more efficient, but they were also much
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faster than horse-drawn
cars, averaging 10-15 miles per hour (compared to 5-6 miles per hour).
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Moreover, cities were able to offer cheap
fares, since each car was capable of holding more people
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than a horse-drawn car.
Finally, businesses were quick to support local lines in their area because
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of increased business prospects; and
local governments were eager to support the development of
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such lines, because
long-term maintenance costs were very low once the initial expenditures had
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been made. Within a few years every major
urban area had an electric streetcar network, which
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made quick, easy
movement between distant points possible for large numbers of people. This
new
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mobility encouraged people to
look for housing farther out from the crowded urban core.
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By the end of the 1950's, the American
landscape had been completely transformed. The development
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of suburban tract
houses had brought even more former city-dwellers outward into the suburbs.
Like
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the streets of identical row houses that
went up as cities expanded, suburban tract houses tended to
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be similar in design.
This standardization made the houses low in cost. However, unlike city row
houses,
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suburban tract houses were detached,
often with sizable yards and on winding streets.
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40
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The post-war prosperity of the 1950's had
given the urban middle class the desire and means
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to own single-family
houses, and detached, suburban tract houses met this desire nicely. Most
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also had garages. Storage space for the
family automobile had become a necessity as the car
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rapidly became the
primary mode of transportation. Both because of and as a result of this
shift
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towards private transportation, public
facilities were built farther from each other and from public
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transportation. In an
ironic twist of fate, the suburbs, which had originally been spawned by
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advances in public transportation,
effectively killed it off in many major cities as people became
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almost entirely reliant
on the private car to get around.
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