Transcript The Age of the City - Thompson's History Class
The Age of the City
Chapter 18
Characteristics of Urbanization During the Gilded Age • Megalopolis • Mass Transit • Economic & Social Opportunities • Pronounced Class Distinctions • New Opportunities for Women • Squalid living conditions for many • Political machines • Ethnic Neighborhoods
The Age of the City
A Nation of Immigrants
Reason for Immigration During the Gilded Age 1. Poverty of displaced farm workers driven from the land by the mechanization of farm work 2. Overcrowding and joblessness in European cities 3. Religious persecution of Jews in Russia 4. Introduction of large steamships and relatively inexpensive one-way passage
“Old” Immigrants and “New Immigrants”
Old Immigrants
:
New Immigrants
: • Came from northern and western Europe • Most Protestant • Mostly English-speaking • High level of literacy and occupational skills • Came from southern and eastern Europe • Many poor and illiterate peasants • Largely Roman Catholic, Greek Orthodox, Russian Orthodox, and Jewish • Crowded into ethnic neighborhoods in NYC & Chicago
Ellis Island
• Opened in 1892 to handle the large numbers of people arriving in the country • Located on a small island near the Statue of Liberty in New York • • Diversity at the island inspired the phrase “
melting pot
” to describe the American population
Cultural pluralism
– presence of many different cultures within one society
Restricting Immigration
• Feelings of
nativism
grew -> foreign immigrants often victims of violence and discrimination • • US government attempted to pass legislation restricting immigration
Chinese Exclusion Act
of 1882 • Immigrants had to pass rigorous medical and document examinations and pay an entry tax
Support of Immigration Restrictions
1. Labor unions
-> immigrants used to depress wages and break strikes
2. Nativist societies 3. Social Darwinists
-> viewed new immigrants as biologically inferior to English and Germanic stocks
The Age of the City
Urbanization
Urbanization
• Urbanization and industrialization developed simultaneously • Cities provided central supply of labor for factories & market for factory-made goods • By 1900, 40% of Americans lived in towns and cities • Millions of young Americans from rural areas joined immigrants seeking new economic opportunities in cities
Streetcar cities
• Improvements in urban transportation led to growth of cities • Allowed people to live in residences many miles from their jobs • • Massive steel suspension bridges such as the
Brooklyn Bridge
made possible longer commutes
Result
-> segregated urban workers by income; Upper & Middle classes moved to streetcar suburbs to escape pollution, poverty, and crime
Brooklyn Bridge (1883)
Skyscrapers
• Cities expanded both outward and upward • Rising land values in central business districts dictated the construction of taller and taller buildings • 1885 ->
William Le Baron Jenny
built the 10 story
Home Insurance Company Building
in Chicago – the first true skyscraper with a steel skeleton • Structure made possible by such inventions as the
Otis elevator
and
central-steam heating system
Ethnic Neighborhoods
• As more affluent citizens moved to suburbs, poor moved in • To increase profits, landlords divided up inner-city houses into small, windowless rooms known as
tenaments
• Different immigrants created distinct ethnic neighborhoods where each group could maintain its own language, culture, church or temple, and social club
Tenement Conditions
• Landlords crammed up to 4,000 people into one city block • Overcrowding and filth promoted the spread of deadly diseases such as cholera, typhoid, and tuberculosis
Labor Laws and Living Conditions •
Jacob Riis
exposed living conditions of poor, urban laborers in
How the Other Half Lives
- Revealed the danger and filth of inner-city tenements
Factors that Promoted Suburban Growth 1. Abundant land available at low cost 2. Inexpensive transportation by rail 3. Low-cost construction methods 4. Ethnic and racial prejudice 5. American fondness for grass, privacy, and detached individual houses
Strains of Urban Life
• Fire • Disease • Inadequate Sanitation • Air Pollution
“City Beautiful Movement” Frederick Law Olmstead
Frederick Law Olmstead
teamed with
Calvert Vaux
in the 1850’s to design New York City’s
Central Park
Boss and Machine Politics
• Political parties in major cities came under control of tightly organized group of politicians, known as
political machines
• Each machine had a boss (ex. Boss Tweed in New York City) • Included
Tammany Hall
in New York City • Positive -> helped find jobs and apartments for recently arrived immigrants • Negative -> graft and fraud
The Age of the City
Awakening of Reform
Books of social criticism
•
Henry George
published
Progress and Poverty
in 1879 -> proposed placing a single tax on land as the solution to poverty • Succeeded in calling attention to the alarming inequalities of wealth caused by industrialization • Encouraged a shift in American public opinion away from pure laissez-faire and toward greater government regulation
Settlement houses •
Jane Addams
opened
Hull House
, a settlement house to aid the poor - served as launching pad for investigations into city conditions - Helped fight for and win new child labor laws
Social Gospel
• Importance of applying Christian principles to social problems • Leading the movement was New York minister
Walter Rauschenbusch
• • Linked Christianity with Progressive reform and encouraged many middle-class Protestants to attack urban problems
Salvation Army
(1879)
The Age of the City
Intellectual and Cultural Movements
Public Schools
• • Schools continued to teach the 3 R’s –
writing, arithmetic Compulsory School Attendance laws
enrolled in public schools
reading,
dramatically increased number of children • Practice of sending children to
Kindergarten
(concept borrowed from Germany) became popular • Growing support for tax-supported public high schools
Reasons for Increase in Higher Education 1. Land grant colleges established under the Morrill Act of 1862 2. Universities founded by wealthy philanthropists –> ex. Vanderbilt University 3. Founding of new colleges for women, such as Smith and Bryn Mawr
Literature and the Arts
• American writers and artists responded in diverse ways to industrialization and urban problems
Realism in American Literature
• • Revealed the greed, violence, and racism in American society
Mark Twain
(pen name for Samuel L. Clemens) became the first great realist author -> The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1884)
Naturalism in American Literature • Described how emotions and experience shaped human experience • Stephen Crane ->
Red Badge of Courage
(1893) • Jack London ->
Call of the Wild
(1903) • Theodore Dreiser ->
Sister Carrie
(1900)
Painting
• Group of social realists known as the “
Ashcan School
” painted scenes of everyday life in poor and urban neighborhoods • Other painters, like
Winslow Homer
, continued to cater to the popular taste for romantic subjects
Music
• • • Every city or town had a symphony orchestra, an opera, or an outdoor bandstand -> played popular marches by
John Philip Sousa Jazz
-> originated in New Orleans and combined African rhythms with western-style instruments
Blues
-> originated in South and expressed the pain of the black experience
The Age of the City
Leisure in the Consumer Society
The Rise of Mass Consumption
• • • • Rising Income
New Merchandising Techniques
- ready-made clothing - canned foods
Chain Stores & Mail-Order Houses
- F.W. Woolworths - Montgomery Ward - Sears Roebuck
Department Stores
- Marshall Field Macy’s Filene’s
Reasons for the Growth of Leisure Activities 1. Gradual reduction in the hours people worked 2. Improved transportation 3. Promotional billboards and advertising 4. Decline of restrictive Puritan and Victorian values that discouraged “wasting” time on play
Amusements
• • • • Drinking and talking at the corner saloon
Vaudeville Barnum & Bailey’s Circus
“Greatest Show on Earth – the
“Buffalo Bill” Cody’s Wild West Show
featuring Sitting Bull and Annie Oakley
Growth of Spectator Sports & Gambling • Boxing, Baseball, Basketball, Football • From the beginning spectator sports closely associated with gambling • “Throwing” of 1919 World Series by the Chicago White Sox • Boxing troubled by efforts to “fix” fights • Major spectator sports of era were open almost exclusively to men