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Immigration and Urbanization

Immigration and Urbanization. Essential Question:. What were the problems caused by rapid urbanization and how did the other half live?. Copy All White Text on Page. Copy.

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Immigration and Urbanization

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  1. Immigration and Urbanization

  2. Essential Question: • What were the problems caused by rapid urbanization and how did the other half live? Copy All White Text on Page Copy

  3. The New Colossus By Emma LazarusNot like the brazen giant of Greek fame,With conquering limbs astride from land to land;Here at our sea-washed, sunset gates shall standA mighty woman with a torch, whose flameIs the imprisoned lightning, and her nameMother of Exiles. From her beacon-handGlows world-wide welcome; her mild eyes commandThe air-bridged harbor that twin cities frame."Keep ancient lands, your storied pomp!" cries sheWith silent lips. "Give me your tired, your poor,Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me,I lift my lamp beside the golden door!"

  4. Chart: Rise of Immigrants OLD VS NEW IMMIGRATION 1,593,000 181,1880 2,753,00 926,000 1,110,000 1,847,000 1,069,000 5,780,000 540,000 2,928,000

  5. Immigrants from Europe Old New New New

  6. Copy OLD VS NEW Protestant Catholic and Jewish North/Western Southern/Eastern Europe Europe Both escaping poverty,religiousand political persecution Moved to farms Moved to cities in the in the Midwest North esp. east coast Became farmers Unskilled workers RELIGION BIRTHPLACE REASONS DESTINATION OCCUPATION Old vs New Immigrants

  7. Nativism • Anti-Immigrant • Anti-Catholic & Jew

  8. Chinese Exclusion Act, 1883

  9. Ellis Island was built in 1892 as the 1st “Immigration Center” Angel Island built 1910 in San Francisco for Asian immigration

  10. POPULATION GROWTH 1870 • 40 million population • 75% lived in rural areas 1900 • 76 million population • 60% lived in rural areas

  11. Cities CITIES • In 1860 no American city could boast a million inhabitants. • 1890, New York, Chicago and Philadelphia had spurted past the million mark.

  12. URBAN OPPORTUNITIES Immigrants Settle in Cities • Industrialization leads to urbanization, or growth of cities • Most immigrants settle in cities; get cheap housing, factory jobs • Americanization—assimilate people into main culture • Schools, voluntary groups teach citizenship skills • English, American history, cooking, etiquette • Ethnic communities provide social support

  13. Mulberry Street – “Little Italy”

  14. Irish NY: St. Patrick’s Cathedral

  15. Hester Street – Jewish Section

  16. Pell St. - Chinatown, NYC

  17. Characteristics of UrbanizationDuring Gilded Age • Megalopolis. • Mass Transit. • Magnet for economic & social opportunities. • Pronounced class distinctions. - Inner & outer core • Squalid living conditions for many. • Political machines. • Ethnic neighborhoods. Copy

  18. Urban Growth: 1870 - 1900

  19. Copy Louis Sullivan • The Chicago School of Architecture • Built 1st skyscrapers • 1856 – 1924 • Form follows function!

  20. Louis Sullivan: Bayard Bldg., NYC, 1897

  21. John A. Roebling:The Brooklyn Bridge, 1883 Copy

  22. Urban Problems: Copy • There became serious shortages in housing. • New types of housing were created 1)Row house– apartment type homes 2)Tenement – Multifamily urban houses often overcrowded & unsanitary • Sanitation was a problem High Crime Rates

  23. “Dumbbell Tenement “

  24. Tenement Slum Living

  25. Struggling Immigrant Families

  26. Urban Problems: Sanitation Copy • Cities had hard time supplying safe drinking water. • People threw garbage out their windows. • Horse manure piled up on the streets • Sewage flowed in streets. • By 1900, many cities built sewers & created sanitation departments.

  27. Fire Problems: Copy • The city had limited supply of water. • Most city apartments were made of wood • People also used candles and kerosene lamps for lighting. • Paid fire departments were first created in 1853 (Cincinnati) • The automatic fire sprinkler was also created in 1874.

  28. Copy The Great Chicago Fire: 1871 • Fire burned for 24hrs. • An estimated 300 people died • 100,000 were left homeless • More than 3 square miles of the city center was destroyed. • Property loss was estimated at $200 million. • 17,500 buildings were destroyed.

  29. URBAN LIVING CONDITIONS

  30. URBANIZATION • Chicago became the main railroad junction in the U.S. • Immigrants move to Chicago because of the job opportunities • Meatpacking • Steel mills • Cattle industry • Multi-cultural community

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