In this interesting and wide-ranging book, Elizabeth Blackmar
investigates the development of New York City's housing market from
colonial times to 1850. She discusses public officials, landowners,
builders, renters and tenants, and the interplay among and between
these groups as the value of land in the city skyrocketed in the
early nineteenth century and made renting the only possibility for
most New Yorkers. American Studies International"
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