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Chapter 13 Section 2. By: Haley Campbell and Megan Gooch. Americans migrate to the cities. After the civil war, urban population grew from 10 million to more than 30 million Immigrants lacked money for farms and education for higher paying jobs Worked long hours with little pay in factories
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Chapter 13 Section 2 By: Haley Campbell and Megan Gooch
Americans migrate to the cities • After the civil war, urban population grew from 10 million to more than 30 million • Immigrants lacked money for farms and education for higher paying jobs • Worked long hours with little pay in factories • Urban areas offered more and better-paying jobs than rural areas
Cities • Bright Lights, running water, modern plumbing • Museums, libraries, theatres • Population grew creating the need to build upward • Skyscraper- tall, steel frame building • First skyscraper- Chicago’s 10 story Home Insurance building built in 1885 • Louis sullivan was the biggest contributor to the design of skyscrapers
City transportation • At first most cities relied on the horsecar • Beginning with San francisco in 1873 more than 20 cities installed cable cars • IN 1887, frank j. sprague developed electric trolley cars • Elevated railroad • Subway system • First boston then new york
High society • Elaborate mansions • Many servants • Women usually didn’t work • Men owned or managed large businesses • Spent lots of money on social events
Middle Class • Afford their own homes and better quality clothing • Women usually only worked because they wanted to not because they had to • At least one servant • Enough money to buy a few luxuries
Working class • Lived in single room tenements, or apartment buildings • No servants • Both husbands and wives had to work • Sometimes had to rent space to a boarder for extra money • Children had to work sometimes as well
urban poverty • Unable to afford homes • Slept on street • Built shacks in back alleys
Crime • Pickpockets, swindlers, and thieves thrived in the crowded cities • From 1880-1900 the murder rate went from 25 per million people to more than 100 per million people • Alcohol contributed to violent crimes
pollution • Improper sewage disposal contaminated city drinking water • Triggered epidemics of typhoid fever and cholera • Even with flush toilets and sewer systems pollution was still a problem • Horse manure left in the streets • Smoke from chimneys • Soot and ash from coal and wood fires
Machine politics • Political machine- informal political group designed to keep power • Came about because cities grew faster than their governments • In exchange for votes party bosses, who ran the political machine, provided new city dwellers with jobs, housing, food, heat, and police protection
Graft and fraud • Party bosses also controlled city’s finances • Many became rich by fraud or graft- getting money through dishonest or questionable means
Tammany hall • Tammany hall, the NYC democratic political machine, was the most infamous • William “boss” tweed was its leader during the 1860s and 1870s • Corruptness led to a prison sentence in 1874