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America Moves to the City

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Title: Slide 1 Author: John J. King Last modified by: Adam Burke Created Date: 11/27/2004 12:38:37 AM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: America Moves to the City


1
America Moves to the City
  • Chapter 25

2
Urban Frontier
  • Cities tripled in size from Civil War until end
    of century
  • By 1900 New York second largest city in world
  • 1880s cities limited in size because people
    had to walk to work
  • Skyscrapers
  • Cheap steel allowed for steel skeleton buildings
    designed by people like Louis Sullivan
  • Otis invented elevator to make access to
    skyscrapers easier
  • Electric light, plumbing and telephones
  • Transportation
  • Electric trolleys, elevated trains allowed for
    cities to expand beyond walking boundaries
  • Suspension Bridges (Brooklyn Bridge) connected
    areas
  • Employment
  • Immigrants and rural residents attracted by
    factories and jobs
  • Department Stores (Marshall Fields, Macys)
  • Allowed for a mixing of social classes and
    development of fashion and consumerism

Chicago, Illinois 1890
3
Problems in City
  • Cities grew faster than people could handle
  • Sanitation
  • In rural areas, materials were repaired or
    reused, urban environments generate waste
  • Consumerism from mass production also led to
    waste
  • Animals left waste throughout the city
  • Police
  • Criminals and con-men were common throughout
    cities
  • Fire
  • Overcrowded cities, tenements made fires
    especially dangerous
  • Dumbbell Tenements
  • Were overcrowded, poorly ventilated, had a shared
    bathroom
  • Slums developed of extremely poor

4
Ethnic neighborhoods
  • Collection of people in one area by language or
    nationality
  • Were mostly poor and consisted of tenements
  • Very overcrowded
  • Suburbs
  • Transportation improvements allowed wealthier
    people to move away from dirt, crime overcrowded
    of the city

5
Old immigration
  • Original settlers English, Scots, Germans,
    Irish, Scandinavians
  • Africans were brought to America through slavery
  • Immigration slows with industrial revolution

6
New Immigration (1880-1920)
  • 24 million immigrants
  • mostly from Eastern, Southern Europe and
    Mediterranean, were illiterate and poor
  • Came from countries with no democratic or
    capitalist traditions

7
Push Pull of Immigration
  • Push factors reasons why someone wanted to
    leave Europe (famine, war, disease, unemployment,
    poverty, oppression)
  • Pull factors reasons that attracted someone to
    America (jobs, freedom, land, family, new start)
  • America Letters
  • Told of opportunity in America that encouraged
    immigrants to come
  • Steamship
  • Some had to work way across the ocean
  • Were strong so ocean travel was safer
  • Were faster than wooden ships
  • Did not rely on winds
  • Could operate on schedule
  • Allow people to work for a little while in
    America than return to homeland

8
Ellis Island Gate to America
  • Ellis Island Immigration center in New York
    Harbor
  • Went through medical check up
  • Questioned on name, where going, job etc
  • Sometimes people given new names because
    inspectors couldnt understand the old one

9
Where Immigrants Settled
  • Half went to NY, MA, PA, IL
  • cities grew fast
  • Went where they could find work
  • Went where family was
  • Many had family members pay for trip
  • Get jobs in similar areas that family members had

10
Assimilation and challenges
  • Many new immigrants were resisted by existing
    populations
  • Immigrants were also given hard time from members
    of same nationality that had been here earlier
  • Catholic schools created to deal with prejudice
    and preserve heritage
  • birds of passage many immigrants returned to
    homeland after earning some money
  • Generation gap created between European parents
    and American children
  • Old values and cultures were replaced by new
    American values
  • Government did little to protect immigrants.
    State governments were dominated by rural areas

11
Jobs for Immigrants
  • Labor bosses
  • Would stay around Ellis Island and give jobs to
    low skilled workers off the boats
  • Would give jobs, shelter, food
  • Worker would give boss part of wages
  • Unskilled labor
  • Work with hands that doesnt require much
    training, education or language skills
  • Dug sewers, subways, built buildings etc.
  • New Immigrants replaced earlier generations of
    immigrants
  • Created tensions between ethnic groups
  • Italians replaced Irish

12
Support for Immigrants
  • Religious leaders advocated support for the poor
    based on social Gospel from Sermon on the Mount
  • Walter Rauschenbusch, Washington Gladden
  • Inspired middle class reform movements
  • Provided daycare, adult education and social
    clubs for poor
  • Encourage playgrounds to be built
  • Improve education
  • Provide social services to the poor
  • Jane Addams
  • Created Hull House in Chicago
  • help immigrants in the city
  • provide place for educated women to do useful
    work
  • Florence Kelley
  • Led movement against sweatshops and child labor

13
Prejudice in America
  • Nativists
  • Opposed immigration, feared higher birthrate and
    immigration would cause Anglo Saxons to be out
    numbered. Also did not want mixing of races
  • American Protective Association voted against
    Catholic politicians had support of unions to
    limit immigrant workers
  • Catholics
  • Anti-Catholic groups feared Catholics were taking
    over US
  • Catholics denied housing, jobs, education
  • Parochial schools created to avoid prejudice
  • Jews
  • Anti-Semitism Leo Frank was lynched
  • Mexicans
  • immigrated to avoid Revolution in 1910
  • Moved to barrios in big cities
  • Japanese
  • Came for economic opportunity
  • Were not allowed to go to school
  • Gentlemans agreement
  • Japan would stop allowing new immigrants
  • US would let wives of existing residents to enter

14
Churches Confront the Urban Challenge
  • Life in cities begin challenging traditional
    values increase crime, poverty and immoral
    behaviors
  • Some churches supported laissez-faire and status
    quo
  • Baptist Church was supported by Rockefeller
  • Episcopal Church supported by JP Morgan
  • Liberal Protestantism
  • Inspired by social gospel led by Dwight Lyman
    Moody
  • Balanced capitalism, science and faith
  • Focus on personal growth and earthly salvation
  • Christian Science
  • Created by Mary Baker Eddy
  • Believed that disease and social ills can be
    healed with prayer
  • Salvation Army
  • Created to address hunger and poverty
  • YMCA
  • Combined physical education with religious
    education

15
Social Darwinism
  • Darwins Theory
  • Charles Darwin wrote On the Origin of the
    Species
  • Nature had law of natural selection
  • Rejected doctrine of special creations which
    established that value of species was determined
    by God
  • Was challenged by both religious and scientific
    communities
  • Strongest religious opponents evolve into the
    fundamentalist movement in 20th century
  • Religion became more for faith and private life
  • Survival of the Fittest
  • Only the strong survive
  • Social Darwinism
  • Applied theory to businesses and poor
  • Justified harsh tactics in business and not
    helping poor

16
Education and Literacy
  • Secondary Education
  • Free public high schools were more popular as
    well as teacher training programs
  • Chautauqua movement encouraged adult education
    through lectures on science, government,
    literature founded by John Vincent
  • Colleges
  • Became more popular including colleges for women
    (Vassar) and Blacks (Howard, Hampton, Atlanta)
  • Morrill Act (1862) Hatch Act (1887) created land
    grant state universities
  • Popular Press
  • 1880s papers designed to entertain as well as
    inform people
  • better technology allow for increase in
    circulation
  • makes newspapers big business
  • Joseph Pulitzer
  • Popularized newspapers with sensationalism,
    comics (Yellow Kid), human interest stories,
    simple language, sports
  • William Randolph Hearst (San Francisco Examiner)
  • Hearst and Pulitzer both used yellow journalism

17
Education and Literacy
  • Medicine
  • Medical schools and new ideas about health
    develop
  • Louis Pasteur, Joseph Lister, William James
    (psychology)
  • Magazines
  • Harpers Weekly Atlantic Monthly Scribners
    Nation
  • Nation focused on intellectual leaders and
    advocated reform of society
  • Progress and Poverty (Henry George)
  • Sought to end connection between progress and
    poverty
  • Wanted to tax land to prevent economic
    inequalities
  • Influenced Fabian socialism
  • Edward Bellamy wrote utopian vision of America
    where problems of society were fixed
  • Novels
  • dime novels were popular gun fighters and
    wild west
  • Ben Hur by General Lewis Wallace
  • Horatio Alger stories
  • Walt Whitman Leaves of Grass Emily Dickinson
    (poets)

18
Education and Literacy
  • Literature
  • Kate Chopin The Awakening (1899) feminist writer
    of the Gilded Age
  • Mark Twain The Celebrated Jumping Frog of
    Calaveras County (1867) Innocents Abroad (1869)
    The Gilded Age (1873) The Adventures of Tom
    Sawyer (1876) The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
    (1884)
  • Captured frontier realism, political satirist
  • Bret Harte wrote gold rush stories
  • William Dean Howells wrote about controversial
    social themes such as divorce and socialism
  • Stephen Crane wrote about life in industrial
    America and also Red Badge of Courage
  • Charles Francis Adams wrote historical books
  • Henry James wrote Daisy Miller was master of
    psychological realism
  • Jack London Call of the Wild wrote about nature
  • Frank Norris The Octopus realist writer wrote
    about corruption of railroads
  • Theodore Dreiser Sister Carrie graphically
    realistic social portrayal of America

19
Changing role of Women
  • Changing Sexual Roles
  • Victoria Woodhull and Tennessee Clafin argued for
    free love and openness in sexuality
  • Comstock Law allowed Anthony Comstock to
    investigate people for obscene behaviors and
    sexual promiscuity
  • New morality and freedom of women increased
    divorce rate and use of birth control
  • Family
  • Urbanites lose community as social support so
    family becomes only support
  • Family size shrinks because kids become financial
    liability instead of asset
  • Feminism
  • Charlotte Perkins Gilman (1898)
  • Called on women to be independent and play a
    larger role in society
  • Advocated daycares and cooperative kitchens to
    free women to work
  • National Woman Suffrage Association
  • Led to cause for suffrage. Elizabeth Cady Stanton
    and Carrie Chapman Catt
  • Catt argued suffrage necessary to allow women to
    protect traditional values

20
African Americans Organize
  • Booker T Washington
  • Leading African American politician
  • Believed blacks should focus on occupational
    training, not legal equality
  • When whites realize how valuable blacks are,
    whites will give equality
  • Washington founded Tuskegee Institute (1881) to
    train African Americans
  • George Washington Carver was famous scientist and
    researcher
  • WEB DuBois
  • Blacks should focus on immediate legal equality
  • Rejected gradual approach
  • Must be able to vote, equal education, end
    discrimination
  • NAACP
  • Founded 1909
  • Work to get equal rights for blacks
  • Tried to end segregation using legal means

21
Temperance Movement
  • Temperance
  • Crusade to end alcohol use
  • Alcohol kept poor in poverty, ruined families and
    communities
  • Partially motivated by nativism opposition to
    Germans and Irish
  • National Prohibition Party (1869)
  • Called on women to pressure men not to drink
  • Womans Christian Temperance Union (WCTU)
  • Frances Willard and Carrie Nation were aggressive
    in fighting against alcohol
  • Anti-Saloon League (1893)
  • 18th Amendment (1919)
  • Begins Prohibition banned sale and consumption
    of alcohol

22
Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Professional baseball begins in 1869
  • Immigrants biggest fans
  • Rooting for team gave people sense of belonging
    or identity
  • Football first started in 1869
  • Rutgers v Princeton
  • Basketball begin in Massachusetts in 1891
  • Provide indoor sport for winter
  • Bicycles
  • Were cheaper, more maneuverable than a horse
  • Was fun and easy way to get around
  • Vaudeville Theatre
  • variety show with many different types of
    entertainment
  • Dance, comedy, gymnastics, juggling
  • Allow theatre for everyone
  • Movies
  • 1890s first movies start being developed
  • nickelodeons showed short silent simple films
    for a nickel
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