Imagining Skyscrapers in a Wheat Field: Regionalism and Cold War Development in the Texas High Plains

IF 0.1 4区 历史学 N/A HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Great Plains Quarterly Pub Date : 2022-06-01 DOI:10.1353/gpq.2022.0022
Brian M. Ingrassia
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract:In the 1950s, Amarillo, Texas, was a sprawling, Cold War boomtown with an Air Force base and nuclear-weapons assembly plant. In this context, John Lawton McCarty, a legendary newspaperman and regional historian who first became famous for the "Last Man's Club" he formed during the Dust Bowl, purchased a square-mile section of land on the edge of the city, which he intended to turn into a mixed-use commercial and real-estate development called Estateland Center. Most of this ambitious development was never built, in large part because of two lawsuits that brought McCarty's budding real-estate empire crashing down by 1960. Nevertheless, the story of Estateland and McCarty's frontier-themed boosterism shows how the unbuilt environment of a Great Plains city illuminates deeper meanings of regional development. McCarty and his fellow boosters in the mid-twentieth-century Texas High Plains looked backward to frontier yesterdays while looking forward to urban tomorrows, envisioning nearly unchecked growth based on exploitation of land and underground water resources.
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想象麦田里的摩天大楼:德克萨斯高平原的地区主义与冷战发展
摘要:在20世纪50年代,得克萨斯州的阿马里洛是一个庞大的冷战时期的新兴城市,拥有空军基地和核武器组装厂。在这种背景下,约翰·劳顿·麦卡蒂(John Lawton McCarty),一位传奇的新闻记者和地区历史学家,最初因他在沙尘暴期间组建的“最后一个人俱乐部”而闻名,他在城市边缘购买了一块平方英里的土地,打算将其变成一个名为Estateland Center的商业和房地产混合开发项目。这一雄心勃勃的开发项目大多从未建成,很大程度上是因为两起诉讼导致麦卡蒂萌芽的房地产帝国在1960年崩溃。尽管如此,Estateland和McCarty以边境为主题的狂妄自大的故事表明,大平原城市的未建成环境如何阐明了区域发展的更深层次意义。麦卡蒂和他在20世纪中期得克萨斯州高平原的支持者们回顾了昨天的边疆,同时展望了城市的明天,设想了基于土地和地下水资源开发的几乎不受控制的增长。
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来源期刊
Great Plains Quarterly
Great Plains Quarterly HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
0.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
20
期刊介绍: In 1981, noted historian Frederick C. Luebke edited the first issue of Great Plains Quarterly. In his editorial introduction, he wrote The Center for Great Plains Studies has several purposes in publishing the Great Plains Quarterly. Its general purpose is to use this means to promote appreciation of the history and culture of the people of the Great Plains and to explore their contemporary social, economic, and political problems. The Center seeks further to stimulate research in the Great Plains region by providing a publishing outlet for scholars interested in the past, present, and future of the region."
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