Visions of Place: City, Neighborhoods, Suburbs, and Cincinnati's Clifton, 1850-2
Incorporated by Cincinnati in the late nineteenth century, Clifton had a reputation as a better-than-average place in which to live, a view that persisted until the end of the twentieth century.In Visions of Place, Zane L. Miller treats ideas about the nature of cities--including their neighborhoods and their suburbs--as the dynamic factors in Clifton's experience and examines the changes in Clifton's social, physical, civic, and political structure resulting from these transforming notions.
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