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Document Description
Title
The
rebuilding
of the
city
of
St.
John's
after
the
Great
Fire
of
1892
:
a
study
in
urban
morphogenesis
Author
Oliver
,
Elizabeth
,
1945-
Description
Thesis
(M.A.)--Memorial
University
of
Newfoundland
,
1983.
Geography
Date
1983
Pagination
vi, 250 leaves : ill., maps.
Subject
St.
John's
(N.L.)--Historical
geography;
St.
John's
(N.L.)--Fire
,
1892
Degree
M.A.
Degree Grantor
Memorial University of Newfoundland. Dept. of Geography
Discipline
Geography
Language
Eng
Spatial Coverage
Canada--Newfoundland and Labrador--St. John's
Temporal Coverage
1892
Notes
Bibliography:
leaves
202-222.
Abstract
A
city's
present
forms
and
patterns
of
land
tenure
and of
relative
locations
are
among
the
most
important
of the
influences
on its
continuing
development.
The
constraining
influence
of
some
of these
forms
and
patterns
can
be
seen
to be
so
great
that they
affect
even
the
rebuilding
of a
city
partially
destroyed
by a
major
catastrophe.
-
"Great
Fires"
were
typically
nineteenth
century
events
,
common
to
many
North
American
, and
other
cities.
In
St.
John's
,
Newfoundland
, the
last
occurred
in
1892.
It
is
around
this
city
and this
Fire
that the
work
of this
thesis
is
centred.
However
, the
city
and its
circumstances
are
examined
not with the
intention
of
providing
only
an
historical
geography
of
late
nineteenth
century
St.
John's
, but with
one
of
utilizing
the
time
and
place
as a
laboratory
for a
study
of
influences
which
may
be
expected
to be
more
or
less
universal.
--
In
order
to
do
this
,
it
was
first
necessary
to
describe
the
city
as
it
was
both
before
and
after
the
Fire
, and also to
examine
in
more
detail
two
small
sub-areas
of the
city.
Only
by
placing
St.
John's
and these
areas
in the
context
of their
times
was
it
possible
to
use
a
knowledge
of them as the
"initial"
and
"final"
states
from
which
the
processes
of
development
and
redevelopment
could
be
inferred.
-
Data
from
two
major
sources
, the
city
directories
for
1890
and
1892
, and the
insurance
atlases
for
1880
and
1892
and for
1893
to
1911
,
along
with that from
one
less
useful
source
, the
city
tax
rolls
for the
early
1890's
, were then
used
in a
statistical
analysis
of the
importance
of
certain
influence
upon
the
process
of
rebuilding.
--
Most
important
of these
influences
was
revealed
to be the
fragmentation
of
ownership:
streets
with the
most
diffuse
ownership
of
land
tended
to be those
least
completely
rebuilt.
The
type
of
ownership
, on the
other
hand
, was
related
to the
extent
households
displaced
by the
Fire
returned
to their
original
streets.
Street
patterns
, and
especially
whether
or not a
particular
street
had been
altered
in the
aftermath
of the
Fire
, also
affected
redevelopment
, as
did
the
pre-Fire
residential
or
commercial
character
of the
street.
Type
Text
Resource Type
Electronic
thesis
or
dissertation
Format
Image/jpeg;
Application/pdf
Source
Paper copy kept in the Centre for Newfoundland Studies, Memorial University Libraries
Local Identifier
75271887
Rights
The author retains copyright ownership and moral rights in this thesis. Neither the thesis nor substantial extracts from it may be printed or otherwise reproduced without the author's permission.
Collection
Electronic
Theses
and
Dissertations
Scanning Status
Completed
PDF File
(64.19
MB)
--
http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/theses/Oliver_ElizabethDale.pdf
CONTENTdm file name
260207.cpd