Virgil's Georgics
Material type:
TextSeries: Phoenix books (Chicago, Ill.)Publication details: [Chicago] University of Chicago Press [1956]Description: 111 21cmISBN: - 0-226-85740-9
| Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Books
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Tedim Christian College Library | 873.01 VIR (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 04163 |
Five Points (an intersection in lower Manhattan formed when Anthony Street was extended to meet Orange and Cross-today's Baxter and North Streets), was the most infamous neighborhood in nineteenth-century America. Visitors from Charles Dickens to Abraham Lincoln flocked to Five Points to witness the filthy streets, bordellos, gambling dens, and tenements that housed the lowest of the low. A close look at Five Points reveals a hidden world. As one of the most ethnically varied areas in the nation's most diverse city, The Five Points story is a classic American example of immigrant energy and ambition. From "Bowery Boy" culture to the invention of tap dance, to the most famous prize-fight of the century, to the timeless photographs of Jacob Riis, Five Points illuminates the colorful history of a fascinating community.
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