1st Edition

Population Persistence and Migration in Rural New York, 1855-1860

By David Paul Davenport Copyright 1989
    266 Pages
    by Routledge

    266 Pages
    by Routledge

    This title, first published in 1989, explores the population change in America during the 1800s by closely examining frontier settlement, urbanisation, and depopulation and emigration from rural areas of the north-eastern United States. Population Persistence and Migration in Rural New York, 1855-1860 will be of interest to students of history and human geography.

    Acknowledgements;  List of Tables;  List of Figures;  1. Introduction  2. Migration in Nineteenth Century America  3. Methods and Materials of Study  4. Migration Differentials  5. Destinations and Differentials  6. Conclusions;  Appendixes;  Bibliography

    Biography

    David Paul Davenport is a Californian who studied Rural New York in the mid-nineteenth century at the University of Illinois, Urbana, under O. Vernon Burton who is now at Clemson University. He taught American History and World Regional Geography for 25 years before retiring in 2008 to focus on research and writing about the American Civil War. His third non-fiction work title is in production. He also undertakes Genealogy research for clients who believe they may have relatives who fought for the Union in the Civil War and for cemeteries in California's San Joaquin Valley who need biographies of veterans who need headstones. He lives in Fresno and provides food to the spayed or neutered cats in the neighborhood.