Portrait of a Port: Boston, 1852-1914

Couverture
Harvard University Press, 1994 - 519 pages

Two hundred and thirty-four striking photographs of the port of Boston combine with interpretive commentary to recapture the flavor, buoyancy, and excitement of the city's years as one of the two or three great American ports. After the Civil War Boston underwent a radical and successful transformation from a declining mercantile home port to an important and competitive modern seaport. At the same time the transition from sail to steam was taking place. Photographic studies of deep water sail and steam vessels, naval ships, fishing boats, catboats, tugs, schooners, and sloops, and of the picturesque wharves--all create a kaleidoscopic visual history of these years of change.

The volume offers, as well, some of the most distinguished early work in photography, including the widest selection ever published of photographs by pioneer marine photographer Nathaniel Stebbins.

 

Table des matières

Shipbuilding and Repairing
71
Some Useful Vessels and Institutions of the Port
117
Fishing
169
Coastal Sail
217
Coastal Steam
285
DeepWater Sail
333
DeepWater Steam
395
The Navy in the Port
431
Recreation
451
of the Photographers
495
Droits d'auteur

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À propos de l'auteur (1994)

W. H. Bunting, a graduate of Harvard University, worked as a commercial fisherman.

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