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Urbanization. I. Rise of the City II. The New Immigrants III. City Life. Key Terms. “New” Immigrants Jacob Riis Dumb-bell Tenements Theory of the Leisure Class Conspicuous Consumption Ward Bosses. I. Rise of the City. Urban Growth Railroads and Industrialization Urban Issues.
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Urbanization I.Rise of the City II. The New Immigrants III. City Life
Key Terms • “New” Immigrants • Jacob Riis • Dumb-bell Tenements • Theory of the Leisure Class • Conspicuous Consumption • Ward Bosses
I. Rise of the City • Urban Growth • Railroads and Industrialization • Urban Issues
Urban Issues • Where were the new city dwellers coming from? • What were conditions inside cities? 3. What was the role of government?
II. The “New” Immigrants • New Sources of Immigration • A Conspicuous Population
Jane Addams Describes Chicago: “Between Halstead Street and the river live about ten thousand Italians—Neapolitans, Sicilians, and Calabrians, with an occasional Lombard or Venetian. To the south on Twelfth Street are many Germans, and side streets are given almost entirely over to Polish and Russian Jews. Still farther south, these Jewish colonies merge into a huge bohemian colony, so vast that the Chicago ranks as the third Bohemian city in the world.”
Lower East Side, New York City, 1900
III. City Life • The Old Cities • New Slums • Conspicuous Consumption • City Government
View of an Old City East View of Philadelphia and Part of Camden, New Jersey, ca. 1836
New York City Officials Inspect a basement Living Room, 1900
William Dean Howlles Describes Being Close to a Tenement in 1896: “To be in it, and not have the distance, is to inhale the stenches of the neglected street, and to catch the yet fouler and dreadful poverty-smell which breaths from the open doorways . . . . It is to see the work-worn look of mothers, the squalor of the babes, the haggish ugliness of the old women, the slovenly frowziness of the young girls.”
Hester Street, New York City, 1903 Fifth Avenue, New York, 1906
Mrs. Astor’s House, Fifth Avenue, New York
The Astors’ Summer Cottage in New Port, RI The family invested two million dollars in the renovations. Caroline Astor presided over countless social activities during the eight weeks each year she visited Beechwood