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"I can picture that old time to myself now, just as it was then:
the white town drowsing in the sunshine of a summer's morning . .
. the great Mississippi, the majestic, the magnificent
Mississippi, rolling its mile-wide tide along, shining in the
sun."--Mark Twain, Life on the Mississippi
"The mighty Mississippi" has inspired writers and artists
for centuries. During the nineteenth century, Mississippi River
towns attracted artists who traveled throughout the United States
producing detailed drawings of cities and towns, which were then
printed and sold as lithographs or used as wood engravings to
illustrate books and magazines. Depicting each street and
building, as well as the natural setting and geographic features
of the surrounding areas, these elaborate bird's-eye views were
enormously popular. In Cities of the Mississippi,
John W. Reps brings together hundreds of spctacular historical
views of Mississippi River towns alongside contemporary aerial
photographs and an engaging text. The result is a remarkable
voyage through the nineteenth century and a powerful visual
record of American urban development.

McGregor, Iowa, 1869 and 1988.
From The Balize, a village for ship pilots near the mouth of
the Mississippi, to St. Cloud, Minnesota, at its source, readers
will experience Mississippi River towns ranging from the major
metropolises of New Orleans, St. Louis, and Minneapolis to the
small towns of Cairo, Kaskaskia, and Prairie du Chien. Reps
introduces the artists, printers, and publishers who recorded the
development of the cities and offers descriptions of the cities
by residents, journalists, and travelers in their own words.
Spectacular modern aerial photographs of twenty-three of the
towns dramatically illustrate changes to the urban scene and
demonstrate the lasting influence of the initial city patterns on
subsequent growth.
Lavishly illustrated with hundreds of prints, more than 140
in color, Cities of the Mississippi is a remarkable
depiction of the distinctive character of the cities created by
one of America's great waterways and a magnificent graphic record
of urban development in the nineteenth-century Midwest.

St. Louis, Missouri, 1896 and 1987.
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