"A fascinating history of the ideas about nature, health, citizenship, and time that informed the construction of some of America's earliest and greatest water systems. By demonstrating that our urban aqueducts are built out of ideas as much as bricks and mortar, Smith ensures that a simple glass of water will never seem so simple again." (Michael Rawson, author of Eden on the Charles: The Making of Boston) "City Water, City Life is a gem of a book, a tightly focused meditation on the antebellum city's 'infrastructure of ideas.' By masterfully compressing myriad period sources, Smith makes major contributions to our understanding of American society and culture." (Harold Platt, Loyola University Chicago) "A crucially important new chapter in US urban history. With impeccable research, Smith seamlessly synthesizes nineteenth-century issues of politics, engineering, finance, aesthetics, law, and medicine-all focused on the creation of water systems in three major cities and all coalescing around the idea of the greater good of the public at large." (Cecelia Tichi, Vanderbilt University)"