A History of America in 100 Maps

(Axel Boer) #1
ENDNOTES AND ADDITIONAL SOURCES 263

Number One (Chicago: Armour’s Bureau of
Agricultural Research and Economics, 1918);
Donald Meinig, Transcontinental America,
1850–1915, vol. 3 of The Shaping of America
(New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1998);
Robert M. Aduddell and Louis P. Cain, “Public
Policy Toward ‘The Greatest Trust in the
World’,” Business History Review, 55: 2(Summer
1981), 217–42.


WATER FOR LOS ANGELES
Additional sources: Marc Reisner, Cadillac
Desert: The American West and Its Disappearing
Water (New York: Penguin, 1986); Kevin Starr,
Material Dreams: Southern California through
the 1920s (Oxford: Oxford University Press,
1990).


UNDERSTANDING THE UNDERWORLD
Additional sources: Frederic M. Thrasher,
The Gang: A Study of 1,313 Gangs in Chicago
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1927).


MUSIC AND MAYHEM IN NEW YORK
Additional sources: Robert C. Harvey,
Insider Histories of Cartooning: Rediscovering
Forgotten Famous Comics and Their Creators
(Jackson: University Press of Mississippi,
2014); Lisa McGirr, The War on Alcohol:
Prohibition and the Rise of the American
State (New York: W. W. Norton &
Company, 2016).


THE MAPS IN OUR HEADS
Additional sources: Peter Gould and Rodney
White, Mental Maps (Harmondsworth:
Penguin Books, 1974).


THE GEOGRAPHY OF HOLLYWOOD
Additional sources: The Motion Picture
Industry as a Basis for Bond Financing (Chicago:
Halsey, Stuart, Inc., 1927); Chris Lukinbeal,
“Teaching Historical Geographies of
American Film Production,” Journal of
Geography 101: 6 (2007), 250–60.


IN SEARCH OF FREEDOM ON THE
OPEN ROAD
p.196 “As Donald Meinig once observed”:
Donald Meinig, Atlantic America, 1492–1800,
vol. 4 of The Shaping of America (New Haven,
CT: Yale University Press, 1986), p. 33.
Additional sources: “The Great American
Roadside,” Fortune (September 1934); The
Negro Motorist Green Book (New York,
published 1936–1967); Mark S. Foster, “In
the Face of ‘Jim Crow’: Prosperous Blacks
and Vacations, Travel, and Outdoor Leisure,
1890–1945,” Journal of Negro History 84: 2
(1999), 130–49; Marguerite S. Shaffer,
See America First: Tourism and National Identity
1880–1940 (Washington, DC: Smithsonian
Books, 2001).


REDLINING, HOME OWNERSHIP, AND
CIVIL RIGHTS
Additional sources: “Residential Security
Maps” and narrative descriptions accessed
through the American Geographical Society
and the Ohio State University; Amy E. Hillier,
“Redlining and the Homeowners’ Loan
Corporation,” Journal of Urban History 29: 4
(2003), 394–420; Kenneth T. Jackson, Crabgrass
Frontier: The Suburbanization of the United States
(New York: Oxford University Press, 1985).


LET THERE BE LIGHT
Additional sources: James T. Patterson,
Congressional Conservatism and the New Deal:
The Growth of the Conservative Coalition in


Congress, 1933–1939 (Lexington: University
of Kentucky Press, 1966); Roger Biles, A
New Deal for the American People (DeKalb:
Northern Illinois University Press, 1991).

8. 1940–1962: Between War and Abundance


and Abundance

WORLD WAR II AND THE REINVENTION
OF CARTOGRAPHY
p.206 “a city of maps”: Newsweek (January 26,
1942), p. 30.
Additional sources: Susan Schulten, T
he Geographical Imagination in America,
1880–1950 (Chicago: University of Chicago
Press, 2001); Susan Schulten, “Richard
Edes Harrison and the Challenge to
American Cartography,” Imago Mundi
50 (1998), 174–88.
THE WARTIME ROOTS OF THE
AMERICAN CENTURY
Additional sources: Donald Meinig, Global
America, 1915–2000, vol. 4 of The Shaping
of America (New Haven, CT: Yale University
Press, 2004).
THE DEFEAT OF GERMANY
Additional sources: “XIX Corps Cracks
Siegfried Line,” Le Tomahawk (XIX Corps
newsletter) 2: 6, David Rumsey Map
Collection, Stanford University; “The 83rd
Infantry Division,” United States Holocaust
Memorial Museum, https://www.ushmm.
org/wlc/en/article.php?ModuleId=10006145
(accessed February 14, 2018).
HOLOCAUST
p.216 “he recalled how ‘gorgeous’ it was”:
Michael Kraus, Drawing the Holocaust: A
Teenager’s Memory of Terezin, Birkenau, and
Mauthausen (Cincinnati, OH: Hebrew Union
College Press; and Pittsburgh, PA: University
of Pittsburgh Press, 2016), p. 56.
MAPPING THE MIGHTY MISSISSIPPI
Additional sources: Rufus J. LeBlanc, Sr.,
“Harold Norman Fisk as a Consultant to
the Mississippi River Commission,
1948 – 1964—An Eye-Witness Account,”
Engineering Geology 45 (1996), 15–36; Michael
C. Robinson, “Harold N. Fisk: A Luminescent
Man,” Engineering Geology 45 (1996), 37–44;
Ellis L. Krinitzsky, “The Contributions of
H. N. Fisk to Engineering Geology in the
Lower Mississippi Valley, Engineering Geology
45 (1996), 45–58; Richard J. Russell,
“Memorial to Harold Norman Fisk,” Bulletin
of the Geological Society of America vol. 76 no. 4
(April 1965), 53–8.
THE ADVENT OF AIR TRAVEL
p.221 “the mountains jump up”: “Picture Maps
Put the U.S. in Focus,”New York Times (August
8, 1954), p. 76.
Additional sources: Tom Patterson and
Nathanial Vaughn Kelso, “Hal Shelton
Revisited: Designing and Producing
Natural-Color Maps with Satellite Land
Cover Data,” Cartographic Perspectives 47
(2004), 28–55.
THE ORIGINS OF THE COLD WAR
Additional sources: George F. Kennan (“X”),
“The Sources of Soviet Conduct,” Foreign Affairs
25: 4 (July 1947), 566–82; Timothy Barney,
Mapping the Cold War: Cartography and the Framing
of America’s International Power (Durham, NC:
University of North Carolina Press, 2015).

THE VIGILANT FIGHT AGAINST
COMMUNISM
p.224 “peaceful coexistence”: Francis E. Walter,
“Foreword” to “Soviet Total War: ‘Historic
Mission’ of Violence and Deceit,” September
23, 1956, prepared by the Committee on
Un-American Activities, US House of
Representatives, p.ix.
Additional sources: Andrew F. Smith, Rescuing
the World: The Life and Times of Leo Cherne
(Albany, NY: State University of New York
Press, 2002); “The Great Pretense: A
Symposium on Anti-Stalinism and the 20th
Century Congress of the Soviet Communist
Party,” May 19, 1956, prepared by the
Committee on Un-American Activities,
US House of Representatives.
THE MAGIC KINGDOM
Additional sources: Richard Francaviglia,
“Walt Disney’s Frontierland as an Allegorical
Map of the American West,” Western Historical
Quarterly 30: 2 (Summer 1999): 155–82;
Steven Watts, The Magic Kingdom: Walt Disney
and the American Way of Life (Columbia,
MO: University of Missouri Press, 2001).
HIGHWAYS AND SUBURBS
Additional sources: Tom Lewis, Divided
Highways: Building the Interstate Highways,
Transforming American Life (Ithaca, NY:
Cornell University Press, 2013); Richard F.
Weingroff, “The Greatest Decade,” Highway
History Federal Highway Administration:
https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/
infrastructure/50interstate2.cfm (accessed
October 25, 2017).
THE BATTLE AGAINST SEGREGATION
Additional sources: Raymond Arsenault,
Freedom Riders: 1961 and the Struggle for
Racial Justice (New York: Oxford University
Press, 2011); Sid Moody, “Freedom Rides
Brought More than Violence,” AP
Newsfeature, Title Collection. U.S. Subjects.
U.S.-South-Social problems, 1961,
Geography and Map Division, Library
of Congress.

9. 1962–2001: An Unsettled Peace


TO THE BRINK OF NUCLEAR WAR
Additional sources: Sheldon M. Stern, The Cuban
Missile Crisis in American Memory: Myths versus
Reality (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press,
2012).
WHY ARE WE IN VIETNAM?
Additional sources: Larry Berman,
Planning a Tragedy: The Americanization of
the War in Vietnam (New York: W. W. Norton,
1982); Aggression from the North: The Record
of North Viet-Nam’s Campaign to Conquer
South Viet-Nam (Washington, DC:
Department of State, 1965).
REVOLT
Additional sources: “Historical Archive,”
April Third Movement, http://www.
a3mreunion.org/archive/archive.html
(accessed February 15, 2018); Harvard
Crimson (May 4, 1970); New York Times
(May 4, 1970), p. 1.
CONTINENTAL DRIFT
Additional sources: Albert E. Theberge,
“Seeking a Rift,” Hydro International,
https://www.hydro-international.com/
content/article/seeking-a-rift (accessed

February 15, 2018); Ronald E. Doel, Tanya J.
Levin, and Mason K. Marker, “Extending
Modern Cartography to the Ocean Depths:
Military Patronage, Cold War Priorities,
and the Heezen–Tharp Mapping Project,
1962–1969,” Journal of Historical Geography
32 (2006), 605–26.
THE PROMISE OF AEROSPACE
Additional sources: Denis Cosgrove, Apollo’s
Eye: A Cartographic Genealogy of the Earth in the
Western Imagination (Baltimore, MD: Johns
Hopkins University Press, 2003); Robert
Poole, Earthrise: How Man First Saw the Earth
(New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2008).
THE TERROR OF AIDS
Additional sources: Abraham Verghese,
Steven L. Berk, and Felix Sarubbi, “Urbs in
Rure: Human Immunodeficiency Virus
Infection in Rural Tennessee,” Journal of
Infectious Diseases 160: 6 (1989), 1051–5;
Peter Gould, The Slow Plague: A Geography
of the AIDS Pandemic (Oxford: Blackwell,
1993); Tom Koch, Cartographies of Disease:
Maps, Mapping, and Medicine (Redlands,
CA: ESRI Press, 2005).
A NATION ON THE MOVE
Additional sources: Donald Meinig,
Global America, 1915–2000, vol. 4 of The
Shaping of America (New Haven, CT: Yale
University Press, 2004); Census Atlas of the
United States (Washington, DC: US Census
Bureau, 2007); James N. Gregory, “Internal
Migration: Twentieth Century and Beyond,”
Oxford Encyclopedia of American Social History
(New York: Oxford University Press, 2012),
pp. 540-55; Kevin Phillips, The Emerging
Republican Majority (Princeton, NJ: Princeton
University Press, 2014 [1969]).
IMMIGRATION AND WORK IN RURAL
AMERICA
Additional sources: William Kandel and
Emilio A. Parrado, “Restructuring of the
US Meat Processing Industry and New
Hispanic Migrant Destinations,” Population
and Development Review 31: 3 (2005), 447–71;
Lourdes Gouveia and Rogelio Saenz, “Global
Forces and Latino Population Growth in
the Midwest: A Regional and Subregional
Analysis,” Great Plains Research 10 (Fall 2000),
305–28; Upton Sinclair, The Jungle, intro.
Eric Schlosser (New York: Penguin, 2006).
GERRYMANDERING IN THE DIGITAL AGE
Additional sources: Mark Monmonier,
Bushmanders & Bullwinkles: How Politicians
Manipulate Electronic Maps and Census Data to
Win Elections (Chicago: University of Chicago
Press, 2001); Common Cause et al. v. Rucho (2018).
BETWEEN PAST AND FUTURE
Additional sources: Laura Kurgan, “Around
Ground Zero,” Grey Room 7 (Spring 2002),
96–101; David Handelman, “History’s Rough
Draft in a Map of Ground Zero,” New York
Times (January 3, 2002).
AFTERWORD: THE ROAD AHEAD
Additional sources: Wei Luo and David
Rumsey, “a16z Podcast: Exploding the Map,”
interview of September 17, 2017, https://a16z.
com/2017/09/16/exploding-map-evolution-
cartography-deep-map (accessed February
20, 2018).
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