immigration and urbanization 1880-1917. the new immigrant immigrants in the period 1880-1917 came...

21
Immigration and Urbanization 1880-1917

Upload: pamela-copeland

Post on 21-Jan-2016

225 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Immigration and Urbanization 1880-1917. The New Immigrant Immigrants in the period 1880-1917 came primarily from Eastern and Southern Europe

Immigration and Urbanization

1880-1917

Page 2: Immigration and Urbanization 1880-1917. The New Immigrant Immigrants in the period 1880-1917 came primarily from Eastern and Southern Europe

The New Immigrant • Immigrants in the period 1880-1917 came

primarily from Eastern and Southern Europe

Page 3: Immigration and Urbanization 1880-1917. The New Immigrant Immigrants in the period 1880-1917 came primarily from Eastern and Southern Europe

The New Immigrant

• Most came as single men, not in family groups

• 44% eventually returned home

• Those who stayed for 5 years or longer send for their wives and children to join them

• I

Italian immigrant family coming to meet husband and father

Page 4: Immigration and Urbanization 1880-1917. The New Immigrant Immigrants in the period 1880-1917 came primarily from Eastern and Southern Europe

Push Factors

• Many people in Europe were experiencing economic hardship due to small farm size and unemployment

• Others were running from ethnic and/or religious persecution. This was especially true of Jews leaving Eastern Europe where they faced repeated “pogroms” or mob attacks and rules that forbid Jews from owning land or attending universities.

Page 5: Immigration and Urbanization 1880-1917. The New Immigrant Immigrants in the period 1880-1917 came primarily from Eastern and Southern Europe

Pull Factors

• Emigrants leaving Southern and Eastern Europe went to western Europe, to Australia, Brazil, Argentina, and increasinglyto the United States• People made their choices based on advertising from steamship companies, landcompanies, and employers• People also went where they had friends and relatives. Letters back home were probably the key in what was “chain migration” to the new world

Page 6: Immigration and Urbanization 1880-1917. The New Immigrant Immigrants in the period 1880-1917 came primarily from Eastern and Southern Europe

The Journey• Most immigrants had little money

for travel• Towns and families often pooled

money to send one young man• Travel was by “steerage” in the

lowest compartments of the steamboats of the day

Page 7: Immigration and Urbanization 1880-1917. The New Immigrant Immigrants in the period 1880-1917 came primarily from Eastern and Southern Europe

Arriving• Immigrants entered the US through

ports cities such as San Francisco, Galveston, and most importantly New York

• In New York, immigrants were processed at Ellis Island

• In San Francisco, immigrants were processed at Angel Island

• Immigrants were subjected to medical inspections and interrogated regarding they money they carried, their destination, their education, etc.

Page 8: Immigration and Urbanization 1880-1917. The New Immigrant Immigrants in the period 1880-1917 came primarily from Eastern and Southern Europe

Ellis Island Video

Page 9: Immigration and Urbanization 1880-1917. The New Immigrant Immigrants in the period 1880-1917 came primarily from Eastern and Southern Europe

Ellis Island – Hitch Video

Page 10: Immigration and Urbanization 1880-1917. The New Immigrant Immigrants in the period 1880-1917 came primarily from Eastern and Southern Europe

Immigrants and the Cities

• Most immigrants settled in large cities, including Boston, Chicago, San Francisco, and most importantly New York

• By 1910, 40% of the population of New York was foreign born, and 80% of the population was foreign born or had foreign born parents

• In 1890, 1.4 million people lived in Manhattan; in 1910, 3 million people lived in Manhattan.

Page 11: Immigration and Urbanization 1880-1917. The New Immigrant Immigrants in the period 1880-1917 came primarily from Eastern and Southern Europe

Urban life: the extremes of poverty and Wealth in the Gilded Age

• Immigrants live in crowded often squalid conditions. The most notorious housing for immigrants was the “Dumbbell” Tenement which crowded 24-32 4-room apartments into a plot of land 25 ft x 100 ft in size. Ventilation was provided by a narrow 5-foot wide air shaft

Page 12: Immigration and Urbanization 1880-1917. The New Immigrant Immigrants in the period 1880-1917 came primarily from Eastern and Southern Europe

Airshaft of a dumbbell tenement, NYC

Page 13: Immigration and Urbanization 1880-1917. The New Immigrant Immigrants in the period 1880-1917 came primarily from Eastern and Southern Europe

Airshafts and outdoor space in NYC tenements

Page 15: Immigration and Urbanization 1880-1917. The New Immigrant Immigrants in the period 1880-1917 came primarily from Eastern and Southern Europe

Immigrant Neighborhoods

• Immigrants tended to live in neighborhoods with other immigrants

• Immigrant neighborhoods provided familiar food and support networks, including foreign language press, mutual aid associations

Mulberry Street, New York

Page 16: Immigration and Urbanization 1880-1917. The New Immigrant Immigrants in the period 1880-1917 came primarily from Eastern and Southern Europe

Employment

• Immigrants found employment in the new industries, as semi-skilled workers in steel mills, coal mines, and the garment industry

• In New York, many immigrant women worked at home or in small sweatshops owned by other immigrants that subcontracted with bigger manufacturers

Page 17: Immigration and Urbanization 1880-1917. The New Immigrant Immigrants in the period 1880-1917 came primarily from Eastern and Southern Europe

Wealth in the CityThe new industrial barons of the day also build huge mansions in New York to demonstrate and show case their increasing wealth

• Andrew Carnegie’s home in NYC.

• In 1889 Carnegie wrote an essay that described a responsibility of philanthropy by the upper class and self-made rich. He stressed the danger of letting large sums of money get into the wrong hands as it is passed down and that the entrepreneur must put his money to good use.

The NYC home of Andrew Carnegie’s associate Henry Clay Frick

Page 18: Immigration and Urbanization 1880-1917. The New Immigrant Immigrants in the period 1880-1917 came primarily from Eastern and Southern Europe

Visualizing wealth and poverty in the Gilded Age

A worker’s Apartment

• City bosses and political machines use to provide welfare to immigrants in exchange for political back-up.

• The bedroom of George Vanderbilt a major railroad owner of the era below.

Given what we have seen about changes in business and work, what conclusions can you draw about the Gilded Age and the impact of the railroad that can contextualize these and explain these images?

Page 19: Immigration and Urbanization 1880-1917. The New Immigrant Immigrants in the period 1880-1917 came primarily from Eastern and Southern Europe

The Suburb• Cities also began developing

street car systems that allowed white-collar workers to move into new developed “suburbs” free from the chaos and crowding of immigrant neighborhoods

Page 20: Immigration and Urbanization 1880-1917. The New Immigrant Immigrants in the period 1880-1917 came primarily from Eastern and Southern Europe

Anti-Immigrant fears

The massive increase in

immigration also spurred anti-

immigrant hostility. This hostility led to

laws banning Chinese immigration in 1882, and then in

the 1920s to laws restricting

immigration from Europe according to

nationality quotas that targeted

immigrants from Eastern and

Southern Europe..

Page 21: Immigration and Urbanization 1880-1917. The New Immigrant Immigrants in the period 1880-1917 came primarily from Eastern and Southern Europe

Americanization• Some patriotic organizations pushed for

Americanization of immigrants, pushing American values, history, and citizenship