"A fascinating book by a creative historian. There are few books that have addressed the issue of the meaning of neighborhood and community in nineteenth-century cities as interestingly and none that has done [it] so rigorously. A work of considerable originality and merit, it deserves the attention of urban historians, labor historians, historical geographers, and urban sociologists."-Richard Stott, George Washington University "Scherzer's work will become a vital part of the debate over the structure of community and individual life in antebellum New York City. Superior scholarship and a deft mix of narrative and quantification make this a solid contribution."-Graham Hodges, Colgate University