The American Renaissance in the West: Capital, Class and Culture Along the Northern Pacific Railroad

IF 0.1 2区 历史学 0 ARCHITECTURE
Katherine Solomonson
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Abstract

ABSTRACT Wealth from western investments lit up the Gilded Age. East and West, it financed the mansions, balls and philanthropy that were integral to upper-class culture. Historians of capitalism have argued that a national upper class coalesced during the late nineteenth century and that the development of a common culture was essential to its formation. Much of this work has focused on the Northeast. How did this play out in the Trans-Mississippi West? This article explores the roles that architects and the buildings they designed played in the intertwined processes of class formation, capitalist expansion and the advancement of white settler colonialism in the American West. It begins in the early 1880s, when Henry Villard (1835–1900), president of the Northern Pacific Railway, launched an ambitious plan to complete the transcontinental railroad and enlisted the architects McKim, Mead & White and their assistant, Cass Gilbert (1859–1934), to design buildings of all kinds along the line — an unprecedented move for a new western railroad. It then follows Gilbert back to St Paul to examine two major projects, one for local clients and one for Villard’s colleague, the eastern capitalist William Endicott, Jr (1826–1914). As agents for eastern capitalists and their counterparts in the West, the architects and the buildings they designed activated in the West an elite aesthetic and professional culture initially generated in the Northeast. Operating across local, regional and national scales, they contributed to the expansion of capitalist markets, the formation of a national upper class and, more broadly, the processes of settler colonialism in a rapidly changing region.
西部的美国文艺复兴:北太平洋铁路沿线的资本、阶级和文化
来自西方投资的财富点亮了镀金时代。无论是东方还是西方,它都为上流社会文化不可或缺的豪宅、舞会和慈善事业提供资金。研究资本主义的历史学家认为,一个国家的上层阶级在19世纪后期联合起来,共同文化的发展对其形成至关重要。这项工作主要集中在东北部。这在横跨密西西比的西部地区是如何发生的呢?本文探讨了建筑师和他们设计的建筑在美国西部阶级形成、资本主义扩张和白人殖民主义推进的交织过程中所扮演的角色。它始于19世纪80年代初,当时北太平洋铁路公司总裁亨利·维拉德(Henry Villard, 1835-1900)发起了一项雄心勃勃的计划,要完成这条横贯大陆的铁路,并聘请了建筑师McKim, Mead & White和他们的助手卡斯·吉尔伯特(Cass Gilbert, 1859-1934),设计沿途的各种建筑——这对一条新的西部铁路来说是前所未有的举动。随后,吉尔伯特回到圣保罗考察了两个大型项目,一个是为当地客户设计的,另一个是为维拉德的同事、东部资本家小威廉恩迪科特(William Endicott, Jr ., 1826-1914)设计的。作为东方资本家和西方同行的代理人,建筑师和他们设计的建筑在西方激活了一种最初在东北产生的精英审美和专业文化。它们在地方、区域和全国范围内运作,促进了资本主义市场的扩张,形成了一个国家上层阶级,更广泛地说,促进了一个迅速变化的地区的移民殖民主义进程。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
25.00%
发文量
0
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