The Birth of American Tourism
240 pages, 6 x 9
Paperback
Release Date:02 Sep 2008
ISBN:9781558496651
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The Birth of American Tourism

New York, the Hudson Valley, and American Culture, 1790-1835

University of Massachusetts Press
Today the idea of traveling within the United States for leisure purposes is so commonplace it is hard to imagine a time when tourism was not a staple of our cultural life. Yet as Richard H. Gassan persuasively demonstrates, at the beginning of the nineteenth century travel for leisure was strictly an aristocratic luxury beyond the means of ordinary Americans. It wasn't until the second decade of the century that the first middle-class tourists began to follow the lead of the well-to-do, making trips up the Hudson River valley north of New York City, and in a few cases beyond. At first just a trickle, by 1830 the tide of tourism had become a flood, a cultural change that signaled a profound societal shift as the United States stepped onto the road that would eventually lead to a modern consumer society.
According to Gassan, the origins of American tourism in the Hudson Valley can be traced to a confluence of historical accidents, including the proximity of the region to the most rapidly growing financial and population center in the country, with its expanding middle class, and the remarkable beauty of the valley itself. But other developments also played a role, from the proliferation of hotels to accommodate tourists, to the construction of an efficient transportation network to get them to their destinations, to the creation of a set of cultural attractions that invested their experience with meaning. In the works of Washington Irving and James Fenimore Cooper and the paintings of Thomas Cole and others of the Hudson River School, travelers in the region encountered the nation's first literary and artistic movements. Tourism thus did more than provide an escape from the routines of everyday urban life; it also helped Americans of the early republic shape a sense of national identity.
The Birth of American Tourism explores not only the historical accidents that initiated tourism, but also the many side developments that intersected with it, from the rise of hotels to accommodate tourists to the creation of transportation networks to carry them, to the invention of cultural attractions designed to infuse their experience with meaning. A welcome addition to American history and cultural studies collections.'—The Midwest Book Review
'The Birth of American Tourism provides a fresh and interesting perspective on several elements of early national American culture. . . . Cultural historians, students of the early American republic, and anyone with an interest in the evolution of leisure and tourism will find much of value and interest here.'—Journal of Social History
'According to Gassan, the origins of American tourism in the Hudson Valley can be traced to a confluence of historical accidents, including the proximity of the region to the most rapidly growing financial and population center in the country, and the remarkable beauty of the valley itself. Tourism in the region, he argues, gave rise to the nation's first literary and artistic movements and thus helped shape national identity.'—Isle
Richard H. Gassan is assistant professor of history at the American University of Sharjah in the United Arab Emirates.
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