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Book Review
| Roanoke, Virginia, 1882–1912: Magic City of the New South. By Rand Dotson. (Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 2007. xxii, 338 pp. $42.00, ISBN 978-1-57233-592-9.)
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| Urban biography is a venerable staple in urban historiography. The difficulty lies in balancing the local story with a broader context that makes the biography meaningful beyond its borders. Rand Dotson's study of Roanoke during its transformation from the town of Big Lick to the fourth-fastest growing city in the country strikes that balance well. |
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Roanoke, like Birmingham, Atlanta, and Charlotte, was a New South creation. The railroad and a diverse economy propelled these towns into an unprecedented period of growth during the late nineteenth century. Their stories seem almost interchangeable. Observers tagged Roanoke as "the Atlanta of Virginia" (p. 15), and "the Birmingham of the Old Dominion" (p. 67). Roanoke's growth was so startling that some likened it to the instant cities of the West, a veritable Denver or San Francisco. |
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Roanoke began its urban life as Big Lick, a dusty tobacco town. In 1882, civic leaders convinced a Philadelphia investment firm, anxious to tap the iron and coal resources of southwestern Virginia, to locate the headquarters of the Norfolk and Western and the Shenandoah Valley railroads near the town. Industries sprouted to support the railroads, and workers from the North and surrounding countryside poured in. |
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