Reviews
Presents an excellent analysis of the origins, evolution and management of the waterpower system (including a discussion of hydraulic and engineering principles) during the 19th-century industrialization period in the US. Highly recommended.
Malone has made a real contribution by illuminating the technological basis for the rise of the nation's first planned industrial city and by showing how the novel demands posed by that industrial complex contributed to the emergence of hydraulic engineering over the course of the nineteenth century.
A work of outstanding scholarship within the field of history of technology and an important contribution to the study of industrialisation.
This worthy contribution to historical understanding is also an accessible undergraduate text... It would enliven any survey course in the history of American technology.
One can only imagine the work that went into mastering this material. Beyond being simply impressive, though, the book's level of detail allows readers to get an intimate sense of how the city developed physically over time. Readers interested in the broaders history of urban infrastructure will surely appreciate this.
Malone has supplied the missing volume, providing not merely a synthesis of what went before but a short book that is well grounded in rich primary source materials.
An extremely well-written, well-researched, and well-organized analysis of how the waterpower system at America’s premier industrial waterpower site emerged and evolved during the nineteenth century and how that system was managed.
Book Details
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Harnessing the Merrimack River
2. Building a City at the Falls, 1821–1836
3. Expanding the Waterpower, 1836–1847
4. Testing the Waters: Scientific Engineering in Lowell
5
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Harnessing the Merrimack River
2. Building a City at the Falls, 1821–1836
3. Expanding the Waterpower, 1836–1847
4. Testing the Waters: Scientific Engineering in Lowell
5. Protecting the People and the Profits, 1847–1865
6. Controlling the System, 1865–1885
Postscript
Notes
Suggested Further Readings
Index