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The history of Over-the-Rhine is almost deep as the history of Cincinnati. Over-the-Rhine's built environment has undergone many cultural and demographic changes. The toponym "Over-the-Rhine" is a reference to the Miami and Erie Canal as the Rhine of Ohio. An early reference to the canal as "the Rhine" appears in the 1853 book ''White, Red, Black'', in which traveler Ferenc Pulszky wrote, "The Germans live all together across the Miami Canal, which is, therefore, here jocosely called the 'Rhine.' " In 1875 writer Daniel J. Kenny referred to the area exclusively as "Over the Rhine." He noted, "Germans and Americans alike love to call the district 'Over the Rhine.' "〔Kenny (1875), pg. 129.〕 ==German neighborhood== The revolutions of 1848 in the German states brought thousands of German refugees to the United States. In Cincinnati they settled on the outskirts of the city, north of Miami and Erie Canal where there was an abundance of cheap rental units.〔Greve 1904, pg. 686〕〔Gieck (1992) pg. 125〕 Until the city annexed the land in 1849 the city's northern border was inside this immigrant area. The border road was called Liberty Street because it separated the city from the outlying land, called "Northern Liberties," which was not subject to municipal law.〔Findlay Market. (Northern Liberties and Over-the-Rhine ). Accessed on 2010-08-19.〕 Thus along with immigrants it attracted a concentration of bootleggers, saloons, gambling houses, dance halls, brothels, and others who were not tolerated in the city of Cincinnati.〔 In 1850 approximately 63% of Over-the-Rhine's population consisted of immigrants from German states, including Prussia, Bavaria, and Saxony.〔Miller and Tucker 1999, pg. 1〕〔(History of the Brewery District ). Accessed on 5/24/2009〕 The neighborhood soon took on a "German" character influenced by its majority of residents.〔 The new immigrants brought a variety of customs, habits, attitudes, and dialects of the German language.〔 Their range of religions, occupations, and classes characterized the Over-the-Rhine German community for the rest of the century.〔 The community was served by several German newspapers, including the ''Volksfreund'', ''Volksblatt'', and the ''Freie Presse''. German entrepreneurs gradually built up a profitable brewing industry, which became identified with Over-the-Rhine and the city.〔 The brewing industry was concentrated along McMicken Avenue and the Miami and Erie canal with the Jackson Brewery, J. G. John & Sons Brewery, Christian Moerlein Brewing Company, and John Kauffman Brewing Company in this area, and John Hauck and Windisch-Mulhauser Brewing Companies across the canal in the West End.〔 By 1880 Cincinnati was recognized as the "Beer Capital of the World," with Over-the-Rhine its center of brewing. During the nineteenth century, most Cincinnatians regarded Over-the-Rhine as the city's premier entertainment district.〔 The author of ''Illustrated Cincinnati'' (1875) noted, "London has its Greenwich, Paris its Bois (Boulogne ), Vienna its Prater, Brussels its Arcade and Cincinnati its 'Over the Rhine.' "〔Greve 1904, pg. 879.〕 Over-the-Rhine was recommended for the visitor "bent on pleasure and a holiday."〔 The description continued: "()here is nothing like it in Europe—no transition so sudden, so pleasant, and so easily effected. ... There is nothing comparable to the completeness of the change brought about by stepping across the canal. The visitor leaves behind him at almost a single step the rigidity of the American, the everlasting hurry and worry of the insatiate race for wealth, the inappeasable thirst of Dives, and enters at once into the borders of people more readily happy, more readily contented, more easily pleased, far more closely wedded to music and the dance, to the song, and life in the bright, open air."〔 Before Cincinnati's incline system was built in the 1870s, which allowed development of residential areas on the hills, the city's population density was 32,000 people per square mile.〔Grace and White 2003, p. 29〕 By contrast, in 2000 Cincinnati's population density was 3,879.8 people per square mile. Horsecars were the chief transportation, but could not be used on the steep hills.〔NKU History and Geography Department. ("The Relationship Between Transportation and Urban Growth in Cincinnati" ), ''Historical Atlas of Cincinnati'', Northern Kentucky University, Accessed on 2009-04-05〕 Cincinnati's new incline system opened the surrounding hills for settlement, but only for those who could afford the property and demand for new housing was high. Throughout the 19th century, residents of the city suffered epidemics of cholera,〔Greve (1904), pg. 587〕 small pox,〔Greve (1904), pg. 951〕 and typhoid fever.〔 〕 These were often spread by travelers on the many steamboats on the river, and through the water supply because of poor sanitation. The epidemics killed thousands in Cincinnati alone, and created panic in the population. Before medicine understood how such diseases were spread, many people believed that vapor from the canal caused malaria.〔Grace and White 2003, pg. 40.〕 (The association of disease with the canal was used in later arguments for converting it for use as a subway and parkway.)〔Singer 2003, p. 18〕 In addition to overcrowding and disease, those who lived in the river basin suffered from flooding, open sewers, and polluting industrial smoke. Riots in 1853, 1855, and 1884 began or took place in Over-the-Rhine. Those who could afford to relocate to the new suburbs in the surrounding hills did so.〔Miller and Tucker 1999, pg. 5〕 The neighborhood, and upper Vine Street in particular, consisted of saloons, restaurants, shooting galleries, arcades, gambling dens, dance halls, burlesque halls, and theaters.〔 Starting in the 1840s, the number of saloons in the area grew steadily.〔Holian (2000), Vol. 1, pg. 141〕 The number of saloons on the main streets in 1890 ranged from 34 on Court Street up to 136 on Vine Street.〔Holian (2000), Vol. 1, pg. 142〕 Nearly 20 years after its favorable review, the 1893 edition of ''Illustrated Cincinnati'' noted, "All or nearly all the leading characteristics (Over-the-Rhine ) which won for it the appellation have passed away. ... The only thing this section of the city is now noted for besides noisy concert and drinking halls and cheap theaters is the great breweries, for which Cincinnati has become so renowned."〔Kenny, D.J. (1893) ''Illustrated Guide to Cincinnati and The World's Columbian Exposition.'' Robert Clarke & Co, Cincinnati. The Pacific Publishing Co. pp. 194-195.〕 At the turn of the 20th century, the neighborhood population reached a peak of 45,000 residents, with the proportion of German-Americans estimated at 75 percent.〔 By 1915 the more prosperous people left the dense city for the suburbs.〔 They were not replaced in as great numbers because new immigrants were attracted to fast-growing industrial cities in the Great Lakes region.〔Miller and Tucker 1999, pg. 6〕 Over-the-Rhine became one of several old and declining neighborhoods that formed a ring of slums around the central business district.〔 Many people thought Over-the-Rhine would eventually disappear, swallowed up by the city's growing business district.〔 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「History of Over-the-Rhine」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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