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34. Park and Burgess, Introduction to the Science of Sociology, p. 509.
35. Although the actions of individuals may be designed and controlled, the
total effect of individual action is neither designed nor anticipated.
36. Human Geography, p. 52.
37. Brunhes points out by a series of maps the very intimate relation between
the distribution of human habitations and the water systems of different countries.
He also demonstrates the relation of the modern industrial community to the
regions of coal deposits.
38. The close relation existing between the coal and iron areas and the
location of modern industrial communities has frequently been pointed out. L. C.
A. Knowles says: “Apart from special and exceptional circumstances industry in
Europe and the United States tends to grow up within easy railway access to the
great coal areas and on these areas the population is massed in towns” (The
Industrial and Commercial Revolutions in Great Britain during the Nineteenth
Century, p. 24).
39. To be sure, if the interests in question are commercialized, the growth of
the community is subject to the same laws of competition as the other types of
communities, with the exception that change is likely to be more rapid and
fanciful.
40. See H. P. Douglass, The Little Town, p. 44.
41. F. E. Clements, Plant Succession, p. 3. Carr-Saunders refers to the point of
population adjustment to resources as the “optimum.”
42. J. Russell Smith, Industrial and Commercial Geography (1913), p. 841.
43. A. T. Hadley, “Economic Results of Improvement in Means of
Transportation,” quoted in Marshall, Business Administration, p. 35.
44. L. C. A. Knowles, The Industrial and Commercial Revolutions in Great
Britain during the Nineteenth Century (1921), p. 216.
45. See Gillette, Rural Sociology (1922), pp. 472–73.
46. For a good statistical summary of the decline in village population in the
United States from 1900 to 1920 see Gillette, op. cit. (1922), p. 465.
47. Warren H. Wilson, “Quaker Hill,” quoted in Sims, Rural Community, p.
214.
48. In actual count of some thirty-odd communities in and around Seattle this
was about the sequence of development.
49. The axial or skeletal structure of civilization, Mediterranean, Atlantic,
Pacific, is the ocean around which it grows up. See Ramsay Traquair, “The
Commonwealth of the Atlantic,” Atlantic Monthly, May, 1924.
50. Compare F. E. Clements, Plant Succession, p. 6.
51. For good discussions of the effect of new forms of transportation upon
communal structure see McMichael and Bingham, City Growth and Values (1923),
chap. iv; also Grupp, Economics of Motor Transportation (1924), chap. ii.
52. By actual count in the city of Seattle over 80 per cent of the disorderly
houses recorded in police records are obsolete buildings located near the
downtown business section where land values are high and new uses are in process
of establishment.
53. A term used by members of the Department of Sociology in the University
of Chicago.
54. This has also been suggested by the Chicago group.
55. Walter Lippmann, Public Opinion, pp. 361–62.
56. Michael MacDonagh, The Reporters’ Gallery. Pp. 139–40.
57. George Henry Payne, History of Journalism in the United States, p. 120.
58. William I. Thomas, The Unadjusted Girl—with Cases and Standpoint for
Behavior Analysis, Criminal Science, Monograph No. 4, Boston, 1923.
59. Thomas and Znaniecki, The Polish Peasant, I, 87–97, quoted in Park and
Miller, Old-World Traits Transplanted, p. 34.
60. Ibid., II, 259, quoted in Park and Miller, Old-World Traits Transplanted,
pp. 39–40.
61. W. I. Thomas, The Unadjusted Girl, p. 71.
62. Robert E. Park, “The Significance of Social Research in Social Service,”
Journal of Applied Sociology (May-June, 1924), pp. 264–65.
63. J. Graham Cruickshank, Black Talk, p. 8.
64. Archbishop E. J. Hanna, head of the Catholic diocese of California,
recently, during the drouth on the Pacific Coast, issued formal instructions to the
pastors of all Catholic churches to offer the following prayer immediately after
mass: “O God, in whom we live and move and are, grant us seasonal rain that we,
enjoying a sufficiency of support in this life, may with more confidence strive after
things eternal.”—From Los Angeles Evening Herald, January 17, 1924.
65. Thomas and Znaniecki, The Polish Peasant in Europe and America
(Boston, 1918), I, 3: “The oldest but most persistent form of social technique is that
of ‘ordering-and-forbidding’—that is, meeting a crisis by an arbitrary act of will
decreeing the disappearance of the undesirable or the appearance of the desirable
phenomena, and the using arbitrary physical action to enforce the decree. This
method corresponds exactly to the magical phase of natural technique. In both, the
essential means of bringing a determined effect is more or less consciously thought
to reside in the act of will itself by which the effect is decreed as desirable, and of
which the action is merely an indispensable vehicle or instrument; in both, the
process by which the cause (act of will and physical action) is supposed to bring its
effect to realization remains out of reach of investigation.”
66. The following telegram was recently in the San Francisco Bulletin:
“Stanford University, Jan. 24, 1924—Stanford has established what is termed a
unique course in the curriculum of western universities. It teaches scientific yell-
leading, according to the rally committee, which sponsors the course. The course is
open to sophomores only. Practices will be held in Encina gymnasium.”
67. Frederick A. Ober, A Guide to the West Indies Bermudas, New York, 1908,
p. 351.
68. J. B. Baillie, Studies in Human Nature, p. 242.
69. A distinction made by Professor Robert E. Park.
70. Park and Burgess, Introduction to the Science of Sociology, p. 163.
71. P. 163.
72. One of the committees of the Chicago Council of Social Agencies has a
subcommittee which is studying this problem in connection with the subject of
uniform districts for social agencies. Several departments of the city government
are interested in considering the possibilities of uniform administrative districts.
73. See chapter “The Growth of the City” for a more elaborate analysis of
urban expansion (pp. 47–62).
74. Numbers in parentheses after titles indicate that the work cited contains
material bearing on the topics in the outline corresponding to these numbers.
TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES
1. Silently corrected palpable typographical errors;
retained non-standard spellings and dialect.
2. Reindexed footnotes using numbers and collected
together at the end of the last chapter.
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