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・ Lower Sioux Agency
・ Lower Sioux Indian Reservation
・ Lower Skagit tribe
・ Lower Skeena River Provincial Park
・ Lower Slate Lake
・ Lower Slaughter
・ Lower Slide Lake
・ Lower Slobbovia
・ Lower Smoky Dome Lake
・ Lower Snake Falls (Burlington, Ontario)
・ Lower Snake River Wind Project
・ Lower Sorbian language
・ Lower Souris National Wildlife Refuge Airplane Hangar
・ Lower South Bay, New York
・ Lower South Grape Creek School (Gillespie County, Texas)
Lower South Providence, Providence, Rhode Island
・ Lower South River
・ Lower South West Football League
・ Lower Southampton Township, Bucks County, Pennsylvania
・ Lower Squankum, New Jersey
・ Lower Sre Pok 2 Dam
・ Lower St. Clair Township, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania
・ Lower St. Esprit, Nova Scotia
・ Lower St. Jones Neck Historic District
・ Lower St. Regis Lake
・ Lower Staircase
・ Lower Stl'atl'imx Tribal Council
・ Lower Stondon
・ Lower Stump River
・ Lower Subansiri district


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Lower South Providence, Providence, Rhode Island : ウィキペディア英語版
Lower South Providence, Providence, Rhode Island

The Lower South Side (or Lower South Providence) is a neighborhoods in southern Providence, Rhode Island. It is bounded from Upper South Providence by Public Street to the north, Interstate 95, to the south, and Broad Street, and the Providence River to the west and east respectively. Though often associated closely with Upper South Providence, they are differentiated by location and the far more frequent occurrence in the latter of institutional buildings and space.
==History==
Originally the area that is now Lower South Providence was pasture land. The area was ceded to the new town of Cranston in 1754 and would not rejoin Providence until 1868.
A streetcar added in 1865 ran west along Public Street, and then south down Ocean Street, and would transform the Lower South Side into Providence's first streetcar suburb. In the next ten years, the streets along which the streetcar ran developed quickly.
Between 1860 and 1880, as the population of Providence doubled to 104,857, Irish immigrants, which had hitherto been confined further north, began to populate the southern part of Lower South Providence. Because the city of Cranston was traditionally Republican, residents began to fear that a large immigrant population, which overwhelmingly voted Democratic, would undermine its Republican political affiliations. For this reason, Cranston ceded the Lower South Side (along with Washington Park) back to Providence in 1868.
While the Upper South Side attracted industry for its proximity to downtown, the Lower South Side had greater access to Narragansett Bay and freight lines via the Port of Providence. Metal and jewelry factories appeared. Since factory owners and workers both lived near work, these operations encourage class mixture, which is reflected in the area's architectural stock. By the 1870s, fewer and grander single-family houses appeared, and the majority of housing became rented duplexes, rented by working class tenants.
By 1900, the large amount of housing construction and creation of new electrified rail lines, gave the area fast transportation and ample affordable housing, and the Lower South Side thrived. Between 1900 and 1950, now second and third-generation immigrants moved into newer, more affluent areas, with the increased prosperity they'd attained, depriving the region of its middle class. In 1943, the Roger Williams Housing Project was created, and though it was successful for the first 15 years, cuts in funding ultimately resulted in the most of the project's buildings being demolished.
After 1950, the automobile sentenced the area to a long inexorable decline. The creation of Interstate 95 under the Eisenhower Interstate System required demolition of existing buildings and severed the region's historical connection to the waterfront. Green space was lost as lots and yards were converted into driveways and garages. Street renovation resulted in the loss of hitherto tree-lined streetscapes. Tenants owning cars began to look further out for newer, more prosperous neighborhoods.
As absentee landlords carved up single-family residences into multi-family dwellings, proper maintenance often neglected. Speculative purchases in the 1980s led many landlords in debt, raising rent, and further neglecting their properties.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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