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487-493 -Draw conclusions from period advertisements about the U.S. -Describe the development of American cities in the late 19 th Century. Quiz:. New American Cities of the 1900s. What conclusions can we draw about life in American cities based on these advertisements?
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487-493-Draw conclusions from period advertisements about the U.S. -Describe the development of American cities in the late 19th Century.
New American Cities of the 1900s • What conclusions can we draw about life in American cities based on these advertisements? • Middle-class had disposable income to spend, which suggests the economy was booming. • Focus on labor saving devices. • Ads often catered to women. • More consumer goods were manufactured for this new middle class. • Americans had more leisure time. • Many of these goods acted as “economic multipliers”. • Life expectancy increased.
New American Cities of the 1900s • New Cities • Theodore Dreiser called them “Giant Magnets”. • Urban population increased 9-fold, total population tripled between 1860-1920. • By 1900 the industrial core of the U.S. was in the northeast between New York and Chicago. • Of the 1,700 cities that existed in the 1900 census, only 2% existed in the census of 1800.
New American Cities of the 1900s • New Cities • Downtown urban centers grew and pushed out residential areas to the outskirts of cities. • Atlanta’s “Five Points District” grew to dominate the insurance and banking business. • Technological advances such as electric trolleys, lights, and elevated railways or “Els” helped bring this about.
The "Grocery Store" at the turn of the 20th Century – Wash., DC
By 1900, most major cities had begun attempting a reorganization of their clogged transportation systems. Here, in 1897 Philadelphia, horse-drawn wagons and carriages competed with an electric trolley system and pedestrians on a cobblestone street.
New American Cities of the 1900s • New Cities • Residential suburban neighborhoods grew and were populated by this new middle-class. • Short Hills, NJ was 18 miles by RR from NYC. • Designs reflected Catherine Beecher and Harriet Beecher Stowe’s book “American Woman’s Home” (1869) became popular. Stowe Beecher
New American Cities of the 1900s • New Cities • A new middle-class developed and changed lifestyle trends. • New middle-class grew to include new jobs such as salespeople, factory super- visors, managers, civil servants and other “white-collar” types of jobs. • Residence – subdivisions or row houses… …not apartments. • Consumption of goods changed. • Faster meals • 1.4 million telephones • Newspaper tabloids grew with easy to read format, comics.. • Joseph Pulitzer’s New York World • Wm. Randolph Hearst’s New York Journal
New American Cities of the 1900s • New Cities • A new middle-class developed changed lifestyle trends. • Department stores were created to sell to this new middle class • Jordan Marsh • Lord & Taylor • Wanamaker & Brown • Marshall Field
New American Cities of the 1900s • New Cities • Leisure activities grew. • Football grew popular at Harvard and Yale. • Brookline Country Club golf became popular. • Bicycles, parks and skating clubs were common. • Baseball grew to become the leading spectator sport. • Amusement Parks attracted thousands such as George Tilyou’s Steeplechase Park in Brooklyn’s Coney Island.
George Tilyous’s Steeplechase Park in Brooklyn’s Coney Island
New American Cities of the 1900s • New Cities • Entertainment via technology • created silent movies like the • “Great Train Robbery”.
New American Cities of the 1900s • New Cities • Leisure also included an interest in buying sheet music to play songs and buy recorded songs: • Josephine in my Flying Machine - 1910 • Bicycle Built for Two – 1893 • The Good Ole Summertime – 1902 • My Merry Oldsmobile – 1904 • Bill Bailey - 1902