780 likes | 1.06k Views
Life in a Big Urban City in the Gilded Age. Megalopolis. Mass Transit. Magnet for economic and social opportunities. Pronounced class distinctions. - Inner & outer core New frontier of opportunity for women. Squalid living conditions for many. Political machines. Ethnic neighborhoods.
E N D
Life in a Big Urban City in the Gilded Age
Megalopolis. Mass Transit. Magnet for economic and social opportunities. Pronounced class distinctions. - Inner & outer core New frontier of opportunity for women. Squalid living conditions for many. Political machines. Ethnic neighborhoods. Characteristics of UrbanizationDuring the Gilded Age
NewUse ofSpace NewClassDiversity NewArchitectural Style New Energy NewSymbols ofChange &Progress The City as aNew “Frontier?” New Culture(“Melting Pot”) Make a NewStart New Form ofClassic “RuggedIndividualism” New Levels of Crime, Violence, & Corruption
John A. Roebling:The Brooklyn Bridge, 1883 http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/player/national-geographic-channel/full-episodes/man-made/ngc-bridges-of-nyc.html
A centennial “birthday present” from the French people, the Statue of Liberty arrived from France in 1886. Lady Liberty Being Readied for Travel
Inscription on the Statue of Liberty Author: Emma Lazarus Give me your tired, your poor, Your huddled masses, yearning to breath free, The wretched refuse of your teeming shore, Send these, the homeless, tempest tossed, I lift my lamp beside the golden door.
These immigrant children playing games at the settlement house that Jane Addams founded in Chicago were having some fun while also getting instruction from a settlement house worker in how to be a proper American. Hull House
Older immigrants, trying to keep their own humble arrival in America “in the shadows,” sought to close the bridge that had carried them and their ancestors across the Atlantic. Looking Backward
Dumbbell Tenement Plan Tenement House Act of 1879, NYC
Thousands of Chicagoans found the gospel and a helping hand at evangelist Dwight Lyman Moody’s church. Although Moody himself died in 1899, his successors continued to attract throngs of worshipers to his church, which could hold up to ten thousand people. Morning Service at Moody’s Church, 1908
In a famous speech in New Orleans in 1895, Washington grudgingly acquiesced in social separateness for blacks. On that occasion, he told his largely white audience, “In all things that are purely social, we can be as separate as the fingers, yet one as the hand in all things essential to mutual progress.” Booker T. Washington (1856–1915)
In 1961, at the end of a long lifetime of struggle for racial justice in the United States, Du Bois renounced his American citizenship at the age of ninety-three and took up residence in the newly independent African state of Ghana. W. E. B. Du Bois (1868–1963)
Shirtwaist Workers Strike 1909 - 1910
Social and Political Activists Carola Woerishoffer,Bryn Mawr Graduate Clara Lemlich,Labor Organizer
The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire, March 25, 1911
Triangle Shirtwaist FactoryAsch Building, 8th and 10th Floors