Chisholm, Michael; & Manners, Gerald [Eds.]:SPATIAL POLICY PROBLEMS OF THE BRITISH ECONOMY
- Paperback 2016, ISBN: 9780521082358
Hardcover
Meadville, PA: Crawford County Convention & Visitors Bureau, 2013. Wraps. Very good.. 48 p. Includes illustrations. Most illustrations in color From Wikipedia: "Crawford County… More...
Meadville, PA: Crawford County Convention & Visitors Bureau, 2013. Wraps. Very good.. 48 p. Includes illustrations. Most illustrations in color From Wikipedia: "Crawford County is a county located in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania. As of 2010, the population was 88, 765. Crawford County was created on March 12, 1800, from part of Allegheny County and named for Colonel William Crawford. Its county seat is Meadville. The entire county makes up the Meadville, PA Micropolitan Statistical Area." Also from Wikipedia: "Meadville is a city in and the county seat of Crawford County, Pennsylvania, United States. The city is within 40 miles of Erie, Pennsylvania and 90 miles of Pittsburgh, PA. It was the first permanent settlement in northwest Pennsylvania. The population was 13, 388 at the 2010 census. ] The city of Meadville is part of the Meadville, PA Micropolitan Statistical Area. Meadville was founded on May 12, 1788 by a party of settlers led by David Mead. Its location was chosen well, for it lies at the confluence of Cussewago Creek and French Creek, and is only a day's travel by boat to the safety of Ft. Franklin. Their settlement was in a large meadow, first cleared by Native Americans led by Chief Custaloga, and well suited for growing maize. The village Custaloga built here was known as Cussewago. The neighboring Iroquois and Lenape befriended the isolated settlement, but their enemies, including the Wyandots, were not so amiable. The threat of their attacks caused the settlement to be evacuated for a time in 1791. Around 1800, many of the settlers to the Meadville area came after receiving land bounties for service in the Revolutionary War. Allegheny College, the second oldest college west of the Allegheny Mountains, was founded in Meadville in 1815 and is the oldest college west of the Allegheny Mountains that has kept its original name. Meadville became an important transportation center after construction of the French Creek Feeder Canal in 1837 and of the Beaver and Erie Canal it connected to at Conneaut Lake and subsequent railroad development. Meadville Theological School was established in 1844 by a wealthy businessman and Unitarian named Harm Jan Huidekoper. It moved to Chicago in 1926. In the late 18th and early 19th centuries Meadville played a small part in the Underground Railroad helping escaping slaves to freedom. An event in September 1880 led to the end of segregation by race in the state's public schools. At the South Ward schools, Elias Allen tried unsuccessfully to enroll his two children. He appealed to the Crawford County Court of Common Pleas, and Judge Pearson Church declared unconstitutional the 1854 state law mandating separate schools for Negro children. This law was amended, effective July 4, 1881, to prohibit such segregation. By the late 19th century, Meadville's economy was also driven by logging, agriculture, and iron production. The Talon Corporation, headquartered in Meadville, played a major role in the development of the zipper. Since the clothing industry was largely unaffected by the Great Depression, the community saw a population boom at that time. During World War II, the nearby Keystone Ordnance plant brought additional jobs to the area. After the war, Meadville's industrial growth continued. Talon remained a major employer, along with the Erie Railroad, American Viscose (later known as Avtex Fibers), Channellock tools, and Dad's Pet Food. In the 1980s, the Great Lakes region saw a decline in heavy industry. By the early 1990s, Channellock and Dad's were the only large companies operating in Meadville. This blow to the local economy was softened by subsequent surge in light industry, mainly tool and die machine shops, earning Meadville the nickname Tool City, USA. The area has seen growth in the 1990s and first decade of the 21st century. The song "Bittersweet Motel" by Vermont jam band, Phish, was inspired when keyboardist, Page McConnell, left a wedding in Meadville and drove down to the Pittsburgh Airport. In addition to the Meadville Downtown Historic District, the Baldwin-Reynolds House, Bentley Hall, Independent., Crawford County Convention & Visitors Bureau, 2013, 3, Chicago, Ilinois, USA: University of Chicago Press, 1930. BH3 - A hard cover first edition book in good+ condition with no dust jacket. No additional printings are indicated on the copyright page. A tight, clean, sound copy in green cloth covered boards with gold lettering and graphics on the spine and on the front with minor overall shelf wear with some light scattered spotting plus there is some light soiling on the spine plus there is some very, very light edge wear on the top and bottom spine edges plus there is some light yellowing of the paper plus there is a personal note about the author and the book in ink on the front free endpaper. An examination of the women's clothing industry and its relationship to industrial and social development of modern metropolitan regions. Indexed, 175p.. First Edition. Hard Cover. Good/No Jacket. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall., University of Chicago Press, 1930, 2.5, Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing, 2001. Octavo, softbound (slick, sepia-tone photo illus. wrappers), 128 pp. Near Fine. From lower cover: Located on Floridas Gulf Coast, Citrus County boasts a rich and diverse landscape, where modern amenities are found side by side the traces of old Florida that remain. Opportunities to experience the natural beauty of the real Florida are plentiful, and the singular history of the region, including the prehistoric creatures, native cultures, and early settlers who called the region home, is accessible in the countys wide variety of historic sites and public resources. From the countless disappointments of Spanish conquistadors searching for riches in the region to the establishment of Fort Cooper during the Second Seminole War, from the hardy pioneers who carved an existence from the Florida wilderness to the thousands of others who took part in the boom-and-bust of industry, the unique story of Citrus County continues to unfold. Today, newcomers to the area find homes in the countys planned communities, while vacationers are drawn to Mother Natures Theme Park. Restored and preserved for future generations, signficiant historic structures such as the Old Courthouse Heritage Museum are receiving new life and the countys past is becoming recognized as a vital treasure. Utilizing vintage images from the varied collections of the Citrus County Historical Society, the Florida State Archives, the Citrus County Tourist Development Council, and several local sources, authors Lynn M. Homan and Thomas Reilly present the nostalgic and informative story of Citrus County from its earliest days to the present. Both residents and visitors alike will enjoy Citrus County and its fascinating look at life in one of Floridas fastest-growing and most dynamic regions., Arcadia Publishing, 2001., 2001, 0, Braided River, 2016. Softcover. Very Good. 10x0x8. Bristol Bay is a region in southwestern Alaska renowned as the most significant source of wild sockeye salmon in the world, as well as of other species of Pacific salmon and herring. Unfortunately, it also contains other valuable resources: gold, copper, and molybdenum (a metal used to make steel alloys), and the extraction of these minerals would likely destroy the world-class commercial and recreational fisheries essential not only to the people who call this region home, but far beyond as well. Mining development threatens Native tribes and the salmon-based subsistence way of life that has sustained them for 4000 years. In addition to millions of migrating salmon, Bristol Bay provides important habitat for many other species including millions of seabirds, sea otters, seals, walruses, Beluga and Orca whales, and the endangered North Pacific Right whales.Conservation in competition with development is a well-worn theme in Alaska, and nowhere is this more apparent than in the battle over Bristol Bayâexemplified by the proposed Pebble Mine. But Bristol Bay's mineral wealth is not the fabled nuggets of Alaskan lore; rather, it is extracted as fine particles through an industrial process that includes pulverizing ore and using cyanide and other chemicals to separate the valuable metals. Mountains of rocky spoils would be created, while highly toxic wastewater would require large containment ponds. Miles of streams would be excavated or buried under waste rock.The Pebble project is located at the headwaters of the two largest tributaries of the Bristol Bay watershedâa watershed whose ecological resources generate $500 million in economic benefits annually, and provides more than 14,000 full and part-time jobs.Where Water Is Gold illustrates just what is at stake through Carl Johnsonâs stunning photography and informative and lyrical essays by Bill Sherwonit, Nick Jans, Steve Kahn and Anne Coray, Dave Atcheson, and Erin McKittrick., Braided River, 2016, 3, London, UK: Cambridge at the University Press, 1971. First Edition . Hardcover. Very Good/No Jacket. EX-LIB/UNCIRCULATED Copy; no loan pocket. Text/BRAND NEW & Bright. Green linen boards/NF. DJ/None. Economics. A study of spatial systems in the business equation of the United Kingdom --- distance. Conclusions are regional, but the authors' methodology universally applicable. The essays (and authors) are: 1, Geographical Space: A New Dimension of Public Concern & Policy (Chisholm & Manners); 2, Employment Mobility in Britain (Keeble); 3, Leads & Lags in Inter-Regional Systems: A Study of the Cyclic Fluctuations in the South West Economy (Haggett); 4, Spatial Structure of Metropolitan England & Wales (Hall); 5, Poverty & the Urban System (Pahl); 6. Some Economic & Spatial Characteristics of the British Energy Market (Manner); 7, Growth, Technical Change & Planning Problems in Heavy Industry with Special Reference to the Chemical Industry (Warren); and 8, Freight Transport Costs, Industrial Location & Regional Development (Chisholm). 248 (+ xi) pages, with tables, figures, and Index. Fine copy despite flaws., Cambridge at the University Press, 1971, 3<