U.S. History I
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Transcript U.S. History I
U.S. History I
Chapter 5
1865-1914
Immigration and Urbanization
Background: Immigrant Family
Right: “Deported Pen” Ellis Island
U.S. History I
Chapter 5 Section 1
“The New Immigrants”
2.3, 3.7, 9.3, 9.4
Top Left: Immigrant “test”, Sikh Immigrants from India,
Angel Island Poster, and Chinese Exclusion
Cartoon
Immigrants Decide to Leave Home
Why did Europeans come to the U.S.?
Push Factors
Farm poverty and worker uncertainty
Wars and conscription
Political tyranny
Religious oppression
Pull Factors
Plenty of land and work (Homestead Act
1862)
Higher standard of living
Democratic political system
Opportunity for social advancement
The Immigrant Experience
• Steerage: the cheapest and basic way to travel
on a steamship
• Arrived at Ellis Island
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K= hernia
X= mental disabilities
H= heart problems
Sc= scalp problems
• “Old” Immigrants: Northern & Western
Europe: Pre- Irish/German
• “New” Immigrants: Southern & Eastern
Europe- Catholic/Jewish
• “Chain” Immigrants: Family of original
immigrant
Angel Island
• Chinese Immigrants
– Taiping Rebellion
– Central Pacific Railroad
• Japanese Immigrants
– Economic hardships
• Over 200,000 Chinese and Japanese
immigrants arrived on the West Coast
during the late 1800s
Resurgence of Nativism
– Nativism: extreme dislike for immigrants by nativeborn people and a desire to limit immigration
• Prejudice Against Newcomers
– Prejudice: an adverse judgment or opinion formed
beforehand without knowledge of the facts; an
irrational suspicion or hatred of a particular group,
race or religion
– Discrimination: Treatment or consideration based
on class or category rather than individual merit;
partiality or prejudice
– American Protective Association
• Henry Bowers
– Anti-Catholic & Foreigners
– Wanted to stop all immigration
The Immigration Debate
• “They would close to the
newcomer the bridge that
carried them and their fathers
over”
• Americanization: Programs aimed at turning
immigrants into “Americans”
• Assimilation: To blend into society
• Melting Pot: Many cultures combine to form
one distinct “American” culture
• Impact on the Anti-Immigrant Movement
– Workingman’s Party of California
• Dennis Kearney
– Fighting Chinese immigration
– Chinese Exclusion Act: 1882
• Barred Chinese immigration for 10 years
• Barred Chinese immigrants already in the country from
becoming citizens
• Even after Chinese protests became a permanent act in
1902
• Act was repealed in 1943
U.S. History I
(Five Points and NYC)
Chapter 5 Section 2
“Cities Expand and Change”
2.2, 2.3, 3.7, 9.3
http://www.latinamericanstudies.org/fiv
e-points.htm
Section 2: Urbanization
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Americans Migrate to the Cities:
Rural to Urban Migrants: Urbanization
Immigrants
The New Urban Environment
Frederick Law Olmsted- Central Park: N.Y.C.
– Skyscrapers- 10 Stories and up: Home Insurance
Building: Chicago
• Louis Sullivan
– Mass Transit: Carry Many People
• Elisha Otis: Safety Elevator Inventor
• Separation by Class
– High Society
– Middle-Class Gentility: “Streetcar” Suburbs-Cleaner
‘perimeter’ of city
– The Working Class
• Tenements : Low-cost multi-family housing
– Average annual income $445.00
Frederick Law Olmstead
• Designed Central
Park in NYC
City Problems
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Pollution/Sanitation
Crime
Racial Tension
“classism”
Political Corruption
Fire: 1871: Great Chicago Fire 100,000
People left homeless
• (top right: immigrant children living in
poverty)
The “Great” Chicago Fire: 1871
• 200-300 Killed
• 100,000 Left homeless
U.S. History
Chapter 5 Section 3
“Social and Cultural Trends”
“2.2,3.6,9.3”
“Uncle Sam is a Man of Strong
Features” (Top Left)
“The Melting Pot” (Top Right)
The Gilded Age
• A Changing Culture
• Gilded Age
–Mark Twain and Charles
Wagner
–The Idea of Individualism
–Horatio Alger
• Brave and Bold
• Rags to Riches stories
Americans Become Consumers
• Conspicuous
Consumption: Buying for
status and the sake of
buying: Buying more for
WANT than NEED.
• Advertising: Rowland
Macy (NYC), Jordan
Marsh (Chicago:
“Marshall” Fields)
• Department Store: variety
of goods organized into
departments…used
advertising
• Standard of living began
to improve for
middle/upper class
Mass Culture
• Newspaper:
• Joseph Pulitzer:
Evening World
• William Randolph
Hearst: Morning
Journal
Literature and Arts: Creating Social
Awareness
• Horatio Alger: Rags to
Riches
• Stephen Crane: Maggie:
a Girl from the Streets
(NYC Slums and
Prostitution)
• Red Badge of Courage
(Psychological Impact of
War)
• Edith Wharton: Age of
Innocence: Questioned
societies “rigid rules”
• Thomas Eakins: Realist
Painter
Popular Entertainment
• Amusement Parks: Coney
Island
• Buffalo Bill’s Wild West
Show
• Church Summer Camps
• Vaudeville: Music, Comedy,
Acrobats, Animal Acts, and
Plays were featured
• Spectator Sports: Boxing,
Baseball
• Baseball: included black
players until
• 1876: Chicago Cubs Formed
• 1887: Chicago White
Stockings refused to play a
team with a black player
• James Naismith: invented
basketball in 1891 at YMCA