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Nonesuch place: a history of the Richmond landscape

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Intentionally built on the fall line where the Piedmont uplands meet the Tidewater region, Richmond has always been a city defined by the land.

From the time settlers built a city on rugged terrain overlooking the James River, the people have changed the land and been changed by it.

Few know this better than T. Tyler Potterfield, a planner with the City of Richmond Department of Community Development.

Whether considering the many roles of the "romantic, wild and beautiful" James River through the centuries, describing the rationale for the location of the Virginia State Capitol on Shockoe Hill or relating the struggle to reclaim green space as industrialization and urban growth threatened to remove nature from the city, Potterfield weaves a tale as ordered as the gridded streets of Richmond and just as rich in history.

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£9.99
Product Details
The History Press
1614232830 / 9781614232834
eBook (EPUB)
29/01/2012
English
128 pages
Copy: 20%; print: 20%
Derived record based on unviewed print version record.