Baltimore's Alley Houses: Homes for Working People since the 1780s

Baltimore's Alley Houses: Homes for Working People since the 1780s

by Mary Ellen Hayward
Baltimore's Alley Houses: Homes for Working People since the 1780s

Baltimore's Alley Houses: Homes for Working People since the 1780s

by Mary Ellen Hayward

Hardcover(20)

$52.00 
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Overview

Winner, 2009 Abbott Lowell Cummings Prize. Vernacular Architecture Forum

This pioneering study explains how one of America’s important early cities responded to the challenge of housing its poorer citizens. Where and how did the working poor live? How did builders and developers provide reasonably priced housing for lower-income groups during the city's growth?

Having studied over 3,000 surviving alley houses in Baltimore through extensive land records and census research, Mary Ellen Hayward systematically reconstructs the lives, households, and neighborhoods that once thrived on the city's narrowest streets.

In the past, these neighborhoods were sometimes referred to as "dilapidated," "blighted," or "poverty stricken." In Baltimore's Alley Houses, Hayward reveals the rich cultural and ethnic traditions that formed the African-American and immigrant Irish, German, Bohemian, and Polish communities that made their homes on the city's alley streets.

Featuring more than one hundred historic images, Baltimore's Alley Houses documents the changing architectural styles of low-income housing over two centuries and reveals the complex lives of its residents.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780801888342
Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
Publication date: 10/31/2008
Series: Creating the North American Landscape
Edition description: 20
Pages: 328
Sales rank: 1,049,053
Product dimensions: 7.30(w) x 10.10(h) x 1.00(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Mary Ellen Hayward is an architectural historian and museum consultant who has worked on a number of projects sponsored by the Maryland Historical Trust and the Maryland Humanities Council. She is coauthor of The Baltimore Rowhouse and coeditor of The Architecture of Baltimore: An Illustrated History, also published by Johns Hopkins.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction: Small Streets and Small Houses
1. Antebellum Free Blacks
2. The Irish
3. German Baltimore
4. The Bohemians
5. African-American Neighborhoods of 1880s Baltimore
6. The Reformers
Epilogue
Notes
Index

What People are Saying About This

Senator Barbara A. Mikulski

Mary Ellen Hayward tells the story of how immigrants found the American dream of owning a home through the unique invention of row houses -- which made homes affordable and accessible and built a community that made Baltimore such a vibrant mosaic of neighborhoods.

From the Publisher

Mary Ellen Hayward tells the story of how immigrants found the American dream of owning a home through the unique invention of row houses—which made homes affordable and accessible and built a community that made Baltimore such a vibrant mosaic of neighborhoods.
—Senator Barbara A. Mikulski

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