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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Tammy IngramPublisher: The University of North Carolina Press Imprint: The University of North Carolina Press Dimensions: Width: 15.50cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 23.50cm Weight: 0.413kg ISBN: 9781469629827ISBN 10: 1469629828 Pages: 272 Publication Date: 30 July 2016 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsA solid and well-written discussion of the myriad aspects of road building in the Progressive-Era South. -- H-SHGAPE Ingram provides a template for future work in this area that others would do well to follow, and that students will benefit from in a variety of courses. A welcome addition to the literature on transportation in the U.S. Recommended. All levels/libraries Its examples are telling and illustrate effectively the complicated history of federally funded and managed Southern highway construction, raising issues that remain relevant in current debates on funding highway repair. Recommended for all readers inter Ingram provides a template for future work in this area that others would do well to follow, and that students will benefit from in a variety of courses. A welcome addition to the literature on transportation in the U.S. Recommended. All levels/libraries.--Choice [This] well-written and accessible account of the Dixie Highway [shows that] road building is so much more than dirt and engineering. --Register of the Kentucky Historical Society Ingram provides an interesting discussion of the impact of World War I on roads, a topic often lacking in highway histories.--AAG Review of Books By skillfully combining national, regional, and state perspectives, Ingram offers a refreshing, informative, and a welcome addition to transportation history.--Journal of American History Its examples are telling and illustrate effectively the complicated history of federally funded and managed Southern highway construction, raising issues that remain relevant in current debates on funding highway repair. Recommended for all readers interested in American politics and transportation.--Library Journal A solid and well-written discussion of the myriad aspects of road building in the Progressive-Era South.--H-SHGAPE Complex and fascinating. From accurate highway signage to the emergence of maps, she shows how people imagined, financed, and built roads in the American South. In her hands, the story of infrastructure development weaves in and out of stories of southern politics, race relations, and economic development, clearly showing, as she says, that 'road building was a crucial linchpin in the transition to the modern South.' --Journal of Southern History Complex and fascinating. -- Jrnl of Southern History Ingram shows how the struggles to create, first, the Dixie Highway, and later, a federal highway system, ignited debates about federal power and local control. She examines the roles of the various stakeholders--automobile manufacturers, farmers, prison commissioners, etc.--and of the various forces (increasing automobility, Word War I, desire for racial control) affecting road building. The book is well conceptualized, well organized and nicely written. --Kari Frederickson, University of Alabama Although historians have previously examined the Good Roads movement, scholars of the early twentieth century South have long awaited a fully contextualized study of road building. Dixie Highway provides the most comprehensive study that we have today of the Good Roads movement and its consequences. This will be essential reading for students of the modern South. --William A. Link, author of Atlanta, Cradle of the New South: Race and Remembering in the Civil War's Aftermath Ingram provides a template for future work in this area that others would do well to follow, and that students will benefit from in a variety of courses. A welcome addition to the literature on transportation in the U.S. Recommended. All levels/libraries.--<i>Choice</i> Complex and fascinating. From accurate highway signage to the emergence of maps, she shows how people imagined, financed, and built roads in the American South. In her hands, the story of infrastructure development weaves in and out of stories of southern politics, race relations, and economic development, clearly showing, as she says, that 'road building was a crucial linchpin in the transition to the modern South.' -- Journal of Southern History Author InformationTammy Ingram is assistant professor of history at the College of Charleston, USA. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |