Urban Masses and Moral Order in America, 1820-1920
Frontmatter -- Preface -- Contents -- Illustrations -- PART One. The Jacksonian Era -- 1. The Urban Threat Emerges: A Strategy Takes Shape -- 2. The Tract Societies: Transmitting a Traditional Morality by Untraditional Means -- 3. The Sunday School in the City: Patterned Order in a Disorderly Setting -- 4. Urban Moral Reform in the Early Republic: Some Concluding Reflections -- PART Two. The Mid-Century Decades -- 5. Heightened Concern, Varied Responses -- 6. Narrowing the Problem: Slum Dwellers and Street Urchins -- 7. Young Men and the City: The Emergence of the YMCA -- PART Three. The Gilded Age -- 8. The Ragged Edge of Anarchy": The Emotional Context of Urban Social Control in the Gilded Age -- 9. American Protestantism and the Moral Challenge of xiv the Industrial City -- 10. Building Character among the Urban Poor: The Charity Organization Movement -- 11. The Urban Moral Awakening of the 1890s -- 12. The Two Faces of Urban Moral Reform in the 1890s -- PART Four. The Progressives and the City -- 13. Battling the Saloon and the Brothel: The Great Coercive Crusades -- 14. One Last, Decisive Struggle: The Symbolic Component of the Great Coercive Crusades -- 15. Positive Environmentalism: The Ideological Underpinnings -- 16. Housing, Parks, and Playgrounds: Positive Environmentalism in Action -- 17. The Civic Ideal and the Urban Moral Order -- 18. The Civic Ideal Made Real: The Moral Vision of the Progressive City Planners -- 19. Positive Environmentalism and the Urban Moral-Control Tradition: Contrasts and Continuities -- 20. Getting Right with Gesellschaft: The Decay of the Urban Moral-Control Impulse in the 1920s and After -- Notes -- Index