politics, immigration, and urban life 1870-1915

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Chapter 15

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Politics, Immigration, And Urban Life 1870-1915. Chapter 15. The Gilded Age suggests that there was a glittering layer of prosperity that covered the poverty and corruption that existed in much of society. This term was coined by Mark Twain. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

Chapter 15Chapter 15

Page 2: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

• The Gilded Age suggests that there was a glittering layer of prosperity that covered the poverty and corruption that existed in much of society. This term was coined by Mark Twain.

• In the late 1800’s businesses operated without much government regulation. This is known as laissez-faire economics. Laissez-faire means ‘allow to be’ in French.

Gilded Age PoliticsChapter 15, Section 1

Page 3: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

Urban Growth

• When cities increased in size after the Industrial Revolution, it was called urban growth.

• In the West, new town grew out of nothing as railroads expanded.

• In the East, established cities grew due to industrialization and the job opportunities it created.

• As industrialization continued, many people left their farms and migrated to the cities for work.

Page 4: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

Immigration

• The 2nd half of the 19th century (late 1800s) also saw a dramatic increase in immigration.

• In the East, most immigrants came from Europe, while on the west coast, many immigrated from China to work on US railway lines.

• What were the push-pull factors? • By the end of the 1800s, nearly 80% of New

Yorkers were foreign born. • Industrialization was largely responsible for the

immigration boom. • The US became a land of promise much like it had

been for the 1st colonists 300 years before.

Page 5: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

Ellis Island

• To handle the influx of immigrants into the country, the federal govt opened Ellis Island in 1892

• A tiny island near the Statue of Liberty in NYC, it became the reception center for immigrants arriving to the US. “The golden door.”

• The diversity immigrants brought to American inpsired the phrase, “melting pot.”

• Most immigrants did not want to fully assimilate (become like the US mainstream). They wanted to maintain many of their cultural traditions.

• In large cities, the nation began to experience a great deal of cultural pluralism (presence of many different cultures within one society).

Page 6: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

Inscription on the Statue of Liberty

"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!"

Emma Lazarus, 1883

Page 7: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

Who are the immigrants today?

• How are they regarded? • What are the stereotypes? • Why do they come here? • What do they do? • How are they treated by natives?

Page 8: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

Problems Caused by Immigration

• Many US citizens felt that immigrants took jobs away from natives, and they often mistrusted foreigners with unfamiliar cultural ways.

• In 1892, the federal government required all new immigrants to undergo a physical exam.

• Immigrants with contagious diseases, such as tuberculosis, faced quarantine, a time of isolation to prevent the spread of disease.

• Urban neighborhoods dominated by one ethnic or racial group of immigrants were called ghettos.

• Most ghettos formed because immigrants felt more comfortable living near people with the same language and traditions.

• Some ghettos formed when ethnic groups isolated themselves because of threats of violence, mostly from whites.

Page 9: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

What are the similarities?

• How is 21st century immigration alike or different from 19th century immigration?

• Did anyone in your family immigrate?

Page 10: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

Religious Differences

• Most US citizens were Protestants, while many of the arriving immigrants were Catholics and Jews.

• The religious practices of immigrants often conflicted with those of natives.

• Natives also treated immigrants differently depending on where they came from. Before the Civil War, most immigrants were from western Europe, and as such were Protestant whites.

• In the late 19th and early 20th, centuries, however, many immigrants were from eastern and southern Europe (Poland, Russia, Italy), and were Catholic or Jewish.

• Racism towards this new crop of immigrants was intense and many faced discrimination b/c of their religious and ethnic differences.

• There was also conflict among various immigrant groups- people from one nation or ethnic group developed rivalries with others.

• Gangs of New York

Page 11: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

”Bandits’ Roost””Bandits’ Roost”

Page 12: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

Mullen’s Alley ”Gang”Mullen’s Alley ”Gang”

Page 13: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

1890s ”Morgue” – Basement Saloon

1890s ”Morgue” – Basement Saloon

Page 14: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

Chapter 15, Section 2

Immigrants from Europe

Page 15: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

Nativism

• As feelings of nativism grew (racism toward immigrants), anti-immigrant groups formed.

• Immigrants were often the victims of violence and discrimination.

• The govt reacted to nativist concerns by attempting to pass laws restricting immigration. Some measures were vetoed by US presidents, but once passed restricting immigration from China.

• The Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 prohibited Chinese immigrants from coming to the US and was not repealed until 1943.

Page 16: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

It’s a Hard-Knock Life

• Though industrialization brought innovation and job opportunities, it also created problems for the urban poor.

• Child labor was common in mills and factories, b/c poor families needed everyone working to get by.

• Children as young as 5 had to leave school to work- missing out on education continued the cycle of poverty.

• Workers feared losing their jobs, b/c unemployment and disability didn’t exist. Does child labor still exist?

Page 17: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

Sweatshops

• Factory work was monotonous and left employees feeling very little sense of pride.

• Hours were long, wages were low, and factory conditions were often dangerous and unsanitary.

• Sweatshops were also hazardous- makeshift factories set up by private contractors in small apartments in or unused buildings.

• Sweatshops were poorly lit and ventilated and unsafe- they relied on poor unskilled laborers (usually immigrants) who worked long hours for little pay.

Page 18: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

The Ghetto

• Immigrants and poor urban workers usually lived in urban slums (poor, inner-city neighborhoods) in tenements (overcrowded apartments that housed several families).

• The slums often had open sewers that attracted rats and other disease-spreading pests.

• The air was dark and polluted with soot from coal-fired steam engines.

• The tenements were poorly ventilated and full of fire hazards. Often, they were occupied by more than 1 family crammed together into a small apartment.

Page 19: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

Chapter 15, Section 3

Urban Living Conditions

Page 20: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

“Dumbell “ Tenement, NYC

Page 21: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

Dumbbell Tenement PlanDumbbell Tenement Plan

Tenement House Act of 1879, NYCTenement House Act of 1879, NYC

Page 22: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915
Page 23: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

Mulberry Street Bend, 1889

Mulberry Street Bend, 1889

Page 24: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

Immigrant Family Lodgings

Immigrant Family Lodgings

Page 25: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

Italian Rag-PickerItalian Rag-Picker

Page 26: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

Lower East Side Immigrant Family

Lower East Side Immigrant Family

Page 27: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

A Struggling Immigrant Family

A Struggling Immigrant Family

Page 28: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

Another Struggling Immigrant Family

Another Struggling Immigrant Family

Page 29: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

How Cities Grew

• Before the Civil War cities were small. Most people walked wherever they needed to go.

• The introduction of the horse-drawn carriage allowed people to move out of the cites to the suburbs, or residential communities surrounding the cities.

• Later in the 1800s, motorized transportation made commuting even easier.

• The first electric trolleys opened in 1868 in New York and the first subway trains appeared in Boston in 1897.

• Buildings became taller too. The first skyscraper in Chicago was ten stories tall.

Chapter 15, Section 3

Page 30: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

Louis Sullivan: Bayard Bldg., NYC, 1897

Page 31: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

Louis Sullivan: Carson, Pirie, Scott

Dept. Store, Chicago, 1899

Page 32: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

Western

Union Bldg,. NYC - 1875

Page 33: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

ManhattanLife

Insurance

Bldg.

NYC - 1893

Page 34: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

SingerBuilding

NYC - 1902

Page 35: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

Woolworth Bldg.

NYC - 1911

Page 36: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

FlatironBuilding

NYC – 1902

D. H. Burnha

m

Page 37: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

Jacob Riis:

How the

Other Half Lived(1890)

Page 38: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

Tenement Slum Living

Page 39: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

Lodgers Huddled Together

Page 40: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

Tenement Slum Living

Page 41: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

Struggling Immigrant Families

Page 42: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

Mulberry Street – “Little Italy”

Page 43: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

St. Patrick’s

Cathedral

Page 44: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

Hester Street – Jewish Section

Page 45: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

1900Rosh

Hashanah

GreetingCard

Page 46: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

Pell St. - Chinatown, NYC

Page 47: Politics, Immigration,  And Urban Life  1870-1915

BibliographyBibliographyÔ Davis, Hadley. “Reform and the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire.” Concord Review womenshistory.about.com/gi/dynamic/ offsite.htm?site=http%3A%2F%2Fwww. tcr.org%2Ftriangle.html

Ô “Famous Trials: The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Trial - 1911.” www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/ triangle/trianglefire.html

Ô “The Triangle Fire.” www.ilr.cornell.edu/trianglefire/