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GOAL FIVE 5.01

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The learner will describe innovations in technology and business practices and ... a cage or platform and the hoisting machinery in a hotel, ... Ellis Island ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: GOAL FIVE 5.01


1
GOAL FIVE5.01
  • Becoming an Industrial Society
  • (1877-1900)
  • The learner will describe innovations in
    technology and business practices and assess
    their impact on economic, political, and social
    life in America.
  • Evaluate the influence of immigration and rapid
    industrialization on urban life.

2
Elevator
  • a cage or platform and the hoisting machinery in
    a hotel, warehouse, mine, etc., for conveying
    persons, goods, etc., to or from different floors
    or levels. This helped the industries to
    transport goods and services.

3
Electric trolleys
  • a device that collects electric current from an
    underground conductor, an overhead wire, or a
    third rail and transmits it to the motor of an
    electric vehicle.

4
Jacob Riis- (1849-1914)
  • Danish-born photographer, author, and social
    reformer. A muckraker, Riis published How the
    Other Half Lives (1890), which exposed the
    poverty and squalor of living conditions in New
    York City slums and led to corrective
    legislation. As a reporter for the New York
    Tribune and the New York Evening Sun, Riis
    documented slum conditions with his camera,
    campaigning for improvements in education, child
    labor laws, housing codes, and playground
    construction.

5
Ellis Island
  • located in New York Harbor near the Statue of
    Liberty, served as the site of the chief U.S.
    immigration station from 1892 to 1954. During
    that time, an estimated 17 million immigrants
    were processed before their entry into the
    country.

6
Culture Shock
  • A condition of confusion and anxiety affecting a
    person suddenly exposed to an alien culture or
    milieu.

7
Settlement Houses
  • The settlement movement was part of a broad
    attempt to preserve human values in an urban and
    industrial age. The settlement idea, as
    formulated by Samuel A. Barnett, was to have
    university men "settle" in a working-class
    neighborhood where they would not only help
    relieve poverty and despair but also learn
    something about the real world from the people of
    the slums.

8
Settlement Houses
  • The settlement program often led the residents
    outside their neighborhoods. They became housing
    reformers, campaigned for anti-child labor laws,
    and established parks and playgrounds. They also
    wrote reports, prepared statistical studies, and
    described their personal experiences in memoirs.

9
Jane Addams- (1860-1935)
  • social worker, reformer, and peace activist.
    Addams helped found Hull House (1889) in Chicago,
    where immigrants and the homeless found shelter,
    education, and medical assistance. Her opposition
    to World War I made her an unpopular figure for a
    time, but ultimately her quest for world peace
    won her both respect and the Nobel Peace Prize in
    1931. Addams was also a strong advocate of
    women's rights and a prominent figure in the
    Progressive era.

10
Chinese Exclusion Act- (1882)
  • law prohibiting Chinese immigrant laborers from
    entering the United States for ten years after
    its enactment, and denying citizenship to Chinese
    nationals. The act was renewed for ten-year
    periods until World War II, when China became an
    ally with the United States against Japan.
    Chinese immigrants are now admitted under the
    quota system and are eligible for U.S.
    citizenship by naturalization.

11
Telephone
  • An instrument that converts voice and other sound
    signals into a form that can be transmitted to
    remote locations and that receives and reconverts
    waves into sound signals.

12
Alexander Graham Bell(1847-1922)
  • scientist, inventor of the telephone, and
    educator. After years of experimenting with the
    transmission of sound through wire, Bell patented
    the first practical telephone in 1876 following
    the transmission of his famous message, "Mr.
    Watson, come here I want you." The Bell
    Telephone Company was organized in 1877. Although
    litigation was instituted against Bell by others
    claiming to have invented the telephone earlier,
    the Supreme Court upheld his claim. Bell
    contributed significantly to the education of the
    deaf, establishing a school and founding the
    Alexander Graham Bell Association for the Deaf.

13
Thomas Edison- (1847-1931)
  • inventor. Edison, known as the "Wizard of Menlo
    Park," changed the world by inventing the
    incandescent electric lamp, the phonograph, and
    the motion picture projector. He also developed
    the world's first electric power station. In his
    lifetime Edison, who said that genius is "1
    percent inspiration and 99 percent perspiration,"
    obtained patents for more than a thousand
    inventions.

14
Typewriter
  • a writing machine that produces characters
    similar to typeset print by means of a manually
    operated keyboard that actuates a set of raised
    types, which strike the paper through an inked
    ribbon.

15
Sweatshops
  • a shop or factory in which employees work long
    hours at low wages under poor conditions.

16
Amusement Parks
  • A commercially operated enterprise that offers
    rides, games, and other forms of entertainment.

17
Spectator Sports
  • Spectator sports as we know them in America date
    from roughly the late nineteenth century. Before
    that time, Americans held contests of skill and
    prowess witnessed by interested observers. But
    professional athletes, rules, leagues, teams,
    regular schedules, paid admissions, sports
    entrepreneurs, and governing bodies such as the
    National Collegiate Athletic Association and the
    baseball leagues are little more than a hundred
    years old.

18
Spectator Sports
  • When the National League was formed in 1876, many
    of the trappings of the modern game were in
    place, including private ownership of clubs,
    their affiliation with particular cities, the
    establishment of standardized rules and
    schedules, the keeping of statistics, and
    extensive coverage in the newspapers (separate
    sports pages did not appear until late in the
    century).

19
Spectator Sports
  • Above all, the National League was an
    organization of clubs it operated as a cartel to
    limit players' ability to sell their services to
    other teams. In their quest for profits, and to
    expand baseball's appeal to the respectable
    middle class, owners forbade playing on the
    Sabbath, as well as drinking, swearing, and
    gambling at ballparks. In important respects,
    then, the National League was the prototype for
    contemporary sports organizations.

20
Frederick Olmstead
  • Landscape architect who designed New York Citys
    Central Park

21
Urbanization
  • Urbanization is by definition a process whereby
    the number of urban dwellers increases in
    relation to rural dwellers. Much
    nineteenth-century American development was
    fueled by urban rivalry. Boosters sought to make
    their cities regional centers by promoting
    transportation improvements and often encouraging
    investments in cultural institutions a museum, a
    theater or opera house, a college, a scientific
    society, a large park.

22
Nativism
  • Although the United States has always portrayed
    itself as a sanctuary for the world's victims of
    oppression and poverty, anti-immigrant
    sentimentknown as nativismhas pervaded most of
    the nation's history. By the late nineteenth
    century, antiradicalism had replaced
    anti-Catholicism as the cornerstone of nativism.
    Many believed that immigrants brought European
    radicalism with them to America, and they
    especially blamed the newcomers for fomenting the
    labor unrest that characterized much of the
    period.

23
Nativism
  • The role immigrants played in the communist,
    socialist, and anarchist movements also helped
    convince many Americans that unless the country
    restricted immigration, radicals from abroad
    might soon dominate the United States. The first
    laws enacted to restrict immigration affected
    only Asians. Congress prohibited immigration from
    China for ten years starting in 1882 and banned
    it permanently in 1902.

24
Melting Pot
  • an environment in which many ideas and races are
    socially assimilated
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