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CHAPTER 14 IMMIGRATION AND URBANIZATION. How did American urban life change between 1875 and 1914?. Standards. SSUSH 12 The student will analyze important consequences of American industrial growth.
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CHAPTER 14 IMMIGRATION AND URBANIZATION How did American urban life change between 1875 and 1914?
Standards SSUSH 12 The student will analyze important consequences of American industrial growth. a. Describe Ellis Island, the change in immigrants’ origins to southern and eastern Europe, and the impact of this change on urban America.
The New Immigrants Why did immigrants come to the U.S., and what impact did they have upon society? Vocabulary: “new” immigrant Americanization steerage “melting pot” Ellis Island Angel Island Chinese Exclusion Act nativism
The New Immigrants New Immigrants Come to America Main Idea:In contrast to “old” immigrants, “new” immigrants were often unskilled, poor, Catholic or Jewish, and likely to settle in cities rather than on farms. Many native-born Americans felt threatened by these newcomers with different cultures and languages. Immigrants Decide to Leave Home Main Idea:Two types of factors lead to immigration. Push factors are those that compel people to leave their homes, such as famine, war, or persecution. Pull factors are those that draw people to a new place, such as economic opportunity or religious freedom. Many immigrants in the late nineteenth century had both push and pull factors that helped them decide to leave the familiar for the unknown. The Immigrant Experience Main Idea:Immigrant experiences varied greatly. However, there were common themes: a tough decision to leave home and family, a hard and costly journey with an uncertain end, and the difficulties of learning a new language and adjusting to a foreign culture. Continued…
The New Immigrants (continued…) Opportunities and Challenges in America Main Idea:Once in America, immigrants immediately faced tough decisions such as where to settle and how to find work. On top of that, most had to learn a new language and new customs. Lucky immigrants had contacts through family and friends who could help them navigate a new and strange world. Immigrants Change America Main Idea:Despite opposition, immigrants transformed American society. They fueled industrial growth, elected politicians, and made their traditions part of American culture.
POLITICS IN THE GILDED AGE • During the late 1800s, big business and reform efforts dominated American politics. • The Big Idea • • Period between 1877–1900 is known as ”the Gilded Age” • • Gilded means covered in a thin layer of gold • • During the Gilded Age, America‘s big businesses prospered • • Beneath this layer of prosperity were the problems of poverty, discrimination and corruption • • Term first used by American writer Mark Twain
The New Immigrants During the late 1800s and early 1900s, immigrants from around the world came to the United States in search of a better life. The Big Idea Immigration to the United States by Region, 1871–1920
Immigrants Decide to Leave Home Push Factors • Land reform • Low prices for grain • Repeated wars and political revolutions • Religious persecution Pull Factors • Plentiful land and employment • “Chain immigrants” • Freedom of religion • Political freedom • Better opportunities in U.S.
The Immigrant Experience • Crossing the Ocean • 1-3 weeks on a ship • Most traveled in steerage • Almost 70% arrived through New York – Ellis Island • Most settled with their own kind • Path of acceptance was more difficult for Asians – Angel Island • Chinese Exclusion Act 1882 • Japanese Segregation
Helping the Needy • Charity Organization Movement • Making charity scientific (like welfare system) • Kept details of who received help so that they knew who was worthy of help or not • Many expected immigrant to adopt American middle class standards of living • The Social Gospel movement • Applied religious principles of charity and justice for the poor • Supported labor reforms and improved living conditions • Settlement Movement (Jane Addams/Ellen Gates Starr) • Created “settlement houses” to offer social services and to help the poor
Chinatown TRANSPARENCY Transparency: Chinatown
Opportunities and Challenges Assimilation • Stayed in cities • Lived in ethnic neighborhoods • Americanization • “Melting Pot” Hostility • Nativism • Religion • Chinese Exclusion Act 1882
Reading Skill: Main Ideas NOTE TAKING Note Taking: Reading Skill: Main Ideas
Political Cartoons: Keeping Foreigners Out ANALYZE Analyze: Political Cartoons: Keeping Foreigners Out
PM TRANSPARENCY Progress Monitoring Transparency Progress Monitoring Transparency: Section 1
Cities Expand and ChangeSection 2 What challenges did city dwellers face and how did they meet them? Vocabulary: urbanization mass transit skyscraper Frederick Law Olmsted suburb Elisha Otis tenement rural-to-urban migrant
Cities Expand and Change America Becomes a Nation of Cities Main Idea:In the late nineteenth century, America experienced a period of urbanization in which the number of cities and city dwellers increased dramatically. Over time, their urban values became part of American culture. Technology Improves City Life Main Idea:As cities swelled in size, politicians and workers struggled to keep up with the demands of growth to provide water, sewers, schools, and safety. American innovators stepped up to the task by developing new technologies to improve living conditions. Urban Living Creates Problems Main Idea:Growing cities faced many problems caused by overcrowding and poverty. As immigrants and rural migrants arrived, they crowded into neighborhoods that already seemed to be overflowing. Housing conditions deteriorated, and risks arose from fire, crime, conflict, and lack of sanitation.
Immigration, 1870-1910 CHART Chart: Immigration 1870-1910
From Farms to Cities • Women were needed less for farmwork • New farm machines replaced laborers • 1880-1910 population on farms fell from 72 to 54 percent • African Americans migrated north
City Advantages Jobs in factories or service industries More opportunities for women: factory jobs, piecework, domestic servants, teachers, office workers Opportunity to move into middle class Education for children Theaters, social clubs, museums, churches Available transportation
How Cities Grew • Suburbs – residential communities • People that could afford it moved out and took horse drawn carriages in • Motorized Transportation • Subways, trolley cars, elevated trains (El), automobile • Growing Upward • Skyscrapers • Chicago’s Home Insurance Company building was the first 10 story building
Urban Living Conditions • Tenements • Speculators built tenements and packed many people in them • Created slums • Slum Conditions • Poverty, overcrowding, neglect, fire danger • Great Chicago Fire 1871 • 18,000 building burned, 250 dead, 100,000 homeless • Property damage was $200 Million ($2 Billion today) • Ghettos • Slums where one ethnic or racial group dominated • Restrictive covenants – don’t let certain people buy land • Jacob Riis • Worked to improve the lives of the urban poor • NY passed first laws to improve tenements b/c of Riis
Reading Skill: Identify Main Ideas NOTE TAKING Note Taking: Reading Skill: Identify Main Ideas
Cities Expand and Change The arrival of millions of new residents brought progress, poverty, and political changes to American cities. The Big Idea: Political Machines Run by powerful "boss“ who has influence with city officials Political machines work to control city politics Machines hand out jobs, contracts, and favors to city residents Machines maintain power over city governments Residents vote for candidates supported by machines
The Results of City Growth Rise of Political Bosses • Political Machine • Unofficial city organization designed to keep a particular party in power • Usually headed by a powerful “boss” • “Boss” would handpick candidates for local office in return for economic favors • Supported by immigrants and poor people • Graft – using one’s job to gain profits • William “Boss” Tweed • Controlled Tammany Hall in New York • Ran New York’s Democratic Party
Growth of Public Schools • Immigrants and education • Uneven support for schools - segregated schools - minorities received less support
Higher Education Expands • Many new colleges opened • Leland Stanford-Stanford University • Women and higher education-coeducation increased • African Americans- most attended black colleges
IDEAS FOR REFORM THE BIG IDEA - The desire to improve conditions in American cities led to the formation of new reform groups
Subway Systems Change Cities TRANSPARENCY Transparency: Subway Systems Change Cities
Technology Advances CHART Chart: Technology Advances
PM TRANSPARENCY Progress Monitoring Transparency Progress Monitoring Transparency: Section 2
Social and Cultural TrendsSection 3 What luxuries did cities offer to the middle class? Vocabulary: Mark Twain Joseph Pulitzer Gilded Age Horatio Alger conspicuous consumerism William Randolph Hearst mass culture vaudeville
Social and Cultural Trends Americans Become Consumers Main Idea:As a result of industrialization and urbanization, more people began to work for wages rather than for themselves on farms. At the same time, more products were available than ever before and at lower prices. This led to a culture of conspicuous consumerism, in which people wanted and bought the many new products on the market. Mass Culture Main Idea: One of the effects of the spread of transportation, communication, and advertising was that Americans all across the country became more and more alike in their consumption patterns. This phenomenon is known as mass culture. New Forms of Popular Entertainment Main Idea:Urban areas with thousands of people became centers for new types of entertainment in the Gilded Age. Clubs, music halls, and sports venues attracted large crowds with time and money to spend.
Americans Become Consumers Conspicuous consumerism Advertising Higher standards of living Victorian Era Public transportation Commuters
Mass Culture Newspapers: Joseph Pulitzer and William Randolph Hearst Literature: Horatio Alger Education Popular Entertainments: amusement parks, vaudeville, movie theaters, sports
Reading Skill: Identify Main Ideas NOTE TAKING Note Taking: Reading Skill: Identify Main Ideas
New Ways of Shopping INFOGRAPHIC Infographic: New Ways of Shopping
Mail Order Catalogs TRANSPARENCY Transparency: Mail Order Catalogs
U.S. Literacy Rates, 1870-1920 CHART Chart: U.S. Literacy Rates, 1870-1920
Educating Americans TRANSPARENCY Transparency: Educating Americans
PM TRANSPARENCY Progress Monitoring Transparency Progress Monitoring Transparency: Section 3