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Immigrants in the Gilded Age. Why Immigrants Came. 1. Work - factories, mines, railroads, farms Free Land - Homestead Act Education – free public schools Freedom - democracy, no forced military service, religious tolerance. How Many Came. 2. Between 1865 and 1920 Estimated 30 million
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Immigrants in the Gilded Age
Why Immigrants Came 1 • Work - factories, mines, railroads, farms • Free Land - Homestead Act • Education – free public schools • Freedom - democracy, no forced military service, religious tolerance
How Many Came 2 • Between 1865 and 1920 • Estimated 30 million • Nearly doubled the U.S. population
1865 - 1890 10 million Germans (2.8) English (1.8) Irish (1.4) 1890 – 1920 10 million Italians (3.8) Russian Jews (3.0) Slavs Greeks Armenians Where They Came From 3
Pogroms 18 4 Violent massacres of Jews in Russia in the late 1880’s
How They Came 5 • Steam powered ships • Crossed the Atlantic in 2 – 3 weeks • The poor traveled in steerage
Steerage 6 • Large open area beneath a ship’s deck near the steering mechanism • Cheap tickets • Limited toilet facilities • No privacy • Poor food
What happened when they arrived 7 • Most Europeans came in through the port of New York – Ellis Island • Subjected to physical exams and quarantined or sent back if found to be diseased
Ellis Island 8 • Huge reception area in New York harbor near the Statue of Liberty • Opened by federal government in 1892 for steerage passengers entering the country
Where They Settled and How They Lived
9 Asians • Settled on the west coast • Many worked on RR’s • Others in mining, fishing, farming, laundry and factory work • Willing to work for extremely low wages
10 Mexicans • Settled largely in the Southwest • Agricultural jobs • Built RR’s in the South • Willing to accept hard jobs for low wages. • Because of immigration restrictions on Asians, many jobs open for Mexican immigrants.
11 Europeans • Settled mainly in cities, or headed west to mining towns • Usually settled with the same ethnic groups in ghettos
Ghettos 12 Ethnic communities within a city
How Americans Responded 13 • Nativism • Restrictive Covenants • Chinese Exclusion Act • Movement to Suburbs
Nativism 14 • An attitude favoring native-born Americans over immigrants • Nativists demanded the teaching of only the English language and American culture in schools
Restrictive Covenants 15 • Agreements among homeowners not to sell real estate to certain ethnic groups or nationalities
Chinese Exclusion Act 16 • 1882 - Law passed that prohibited Chinese laborers from entering the U.S. • Labor unions claimed that American wages were dropping because Asian immigrants accepted such low pay. • Law was in effect until 1943
Suburbs 17 • Residential communities that began to develop on outskirts of major cities • Public rail carriages were used for transportation to and from the city by those who could afford it.
Urbanization 18 The growth of cities (urban areas)
New York City c. 1900
Philadelphia Street Scene c.1890
Tenements 19 • Low-cost apartment buildings designed to house as many families as an owner could pack into them • Generally associated with slums
Tenement living c.1890
20 Urban Living Conditions • Pollution - soot made the air dark and foul • Poor sanitation - open sewers, rats and other vermin • Contaminated drinking water • Diseases spread rapidly - TB, malaria, typhoid • Fire danger - 18,000 buildings burned in Chicago and 250 died in 1871 fire
Urban Politics 21 • Political Divisions - as cities grew, so did public pressures for sanitation, taxes, transportation, etc. Many people vied for offices. • Graft—people using office for personal gain • Political machines develop
Political Machines 22 • Unofficial organizations designed to keep a particular party in office • Usually run by a “boss” who either held office himself or hand-picked an individual to hold office
Tammany Hall 23 • A club that ran the NY Democratic Party • Controlled by “Boss” Tweed in the 1850’s -1870’s
Caption reads: “As long as I count the votes, what are you going to do about it?”
Social Reform 24 • Efforts to improve society by • Aiding and educating the poor • Eliminating evil or destructive elements
Jacob Riis 25 • Immigrant from Denmark 1870 • Lived in NYC tenements • Became a newspaper reporter • Wrote How the Other Half Lives, exposing the terrible conditions in tenement slums
Prohibition 26 • Movement to legally abolish alcohol in the U.S. • Supporters blamed immigrants for a large portion of the alcohol-related problems in the nation.
Social Gospel Movement 27 • Churches sought to address problems like drinking and gambling by applying Jesus’s teachings to society. • Sought labor reforms and improved living conditions for workers
Education 28 • Schools aimed at assimilating immigrants into society. • Immigrants sought literacy and civic skills needed to gain citizenship.
Settlement Movement 29 • Reformers who believed that hand-outs did not help the poor • They would settle among the needy to witness their plight first-hand and offer social services through “settlement houses.”