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Warner, Sam Bass, 1928- (Personal Name)

Preferred form: Warner, Sam Bass, 1928-

His Streetcar suburbs, 1962.

His To dwell is to garden, c1987: CIP t.p. (Sam Bass Warner, Jr.) galley (faculty of Boston Univ.)

Restorative gardens, 1998: title page (Sam Bass Warner, Jr.)

Greater Boston: adapting regional traditions to the present, 2001: title page (Sam Bass Warner, Jr.) page 4 of cover (Visiting Professor in the Department of Urban Studies and Planning at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; he is the author of The Way We Really Live: Social Change in Metropolitan Boston Since 1920, The Urban Wilderness: A History of the American City, and The Private City: Philadelphia in Three Periods of Its Growth)

American urban form, 2012: title page (Sam Bass Warner) page 4 of cover (noted urban historian and Visiting Professor of Urban History at MIT, is the author of Streetcar Suburbs: The Process of Growth in Boston, 1870-1900; The Private City: Philadelphia in Three Periods of Its Growth; The Urban Wilderness: A History of the American City; To Dwell Is to Garden: A History of Boston's Community Gardens; and other books)

Contemporary Authors Online, via WWW, September 21, 2012 (Sam Bass Warner, Jr.; born April 6, 1928 in Boston, Massachusetts; son of Sam Bass (a publisher) and Helen (Wilson) Warner; Harvard University, A.B., 1950; Ph. D., 1959; Yale University (law studies), 1950-1951; Boston University, M.S. (journalism), 1952; Watertown Sun, Watertown, MA, editor and publisher, 1951-1952; Massachusetts Institute of Technology-Harvard University Joint Center for Urban Studies, Cambridge, MA, research associate, 1959-1963; Harvard University, Cambridge, instructor, 1960-1963; Washington University, St. Louis, MO, associate professor of history and architecture and research associate at Institute for Urban and Regional Studies, 1963-1967; University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, professor of history, 1967-1972; Boston University, Boston, MA, William Edwards Huntington Professor of History, 1973-1991; Brandeis University, Waltham, MA, Jack Meyerhoff Professor of Environmental Studies, 1991-)

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