Gilded Age & Society. Ms. Ramos Alta Loma High School * PPT adapted from PPT Palooza
|
|
- Christiana Hamilton
- 6 years ago
- Views:
Transcription
1 Gilded Age & Society Ms. Ramos Alta Loma High School * PPT adapted from PPT Palooza
2 Robber Barons Business leaders built their fortunes by stealing from the public. They drained the country of its natural resources. They persuaded or bribed public officials to interpret laws in their favor. They ruthlessly drove their competitors to ruin. They paid their workers meager wages and forced them to toil under dangerous and unhealthy conditions. Captains of Industry The business leaders served their nation in a positive way. They increased the supply of goods by building factories. They raised productivity and expanded markets. They created jobs that enabled many Americans to buy new goods and raise their standard of living. They also created museums, libraries, and universities as philanthropists
3 Knights of Labor All workers except Chinese Wanted 8 hr. day, prohibition, end child labor Unrealistic and vague goals Loss of important strikes and failure of cooperatives Faded away due to poor organizational leadership Haymarket Riot will taint their reputation American Federation of Labor or AFL Samuel Gompers, 1881 Skilled workers only Work within political system for change Closed shop and collective bargaining Also supported Chinese Exclusion
4 New Architectural Style New Use of Space New Class Diversity New Energy New Symbols of Change & Progress The City as a New Frontier? New Culture ( Melting Pot ) Make a New Start New Levels of Crime, Violence, & Corruption New Form of Classic Rugged Individualism
5 Oral histories of Jewish immigrants to Pittsburgh Our synagogue was in a room with the windows blacked out. We were afraid to speak Yiddish on the streets. We often had to hide from people who came to persecute the Jews. During the pogrom (organized government persecution of the Jews) in Vitebsk (Russia) around 1905, my collarbone was broken and the back of my head still bears the scar of a dagger. I still have a scar on my thigh where a Russian soldier struck me with his sword. I was three years old and my mother tried to protect me with her body, but he got to me. It did not seem reasonable for me to serve the Czar in the Army. Why they came
6 Oral histories of Italian immigrants The main reason was bread. There was always bread in America. Life in America was better. There was always work in America. I never went to an American school, but I insisted that my children attend university in the United States where they had more chance. I have progressed; I have lived well. I have been able to send my children to good schools so that today they hold positions of respect. My brother who stayed here in Italy cannot say that.
7 RELIGION BIRTHPLACE Protestant North/Western Europe Catholic and Jewish Southern/Eastern Europe REASONS Both escaping poverty, religious and political persecution DESTINATION Moved to farms in the Midwest Moved to cities in the Northeast OCCUPATION Became farmers Unskilled workers
8 Old Immigrants resented the New Immigrants. New Immigrants came to this country for the same reasons as the Old Immigrants.
9
10
11 Housing Working-class families live in houses on outskirts or boardinghouses Later, row houses built for single families Immigrants take over row houses, 2 3 families per house Tenements multifamily urban dwellings, are overcrowded, unsanitary Transportation Mass transit move large numbers of people along fixed routes By 20 th century, transit systems link city to suburbs
12 Job opportunities for Women School teaching Domestic service Women doctors Lawyers, typists, telephone girls, librarians, journalists and social workers. Women gainfully employed rose from 2.5 million in 1880 to 8 million in 1910.
13 The Charity Organization Movement Wanted immigrants to adopt American, middle-class standards. The Social Gospel Movement The Settlement Movement charity and justice to society s problems. Moved into poor communities settlement houses Hull House
14 William Le Baron Jenney Father of the Modern Skyscraper Central Y.M.C.A., Chicago, 1891
15 D. H. Burnham Use of steel as a super structure. Fisher [Apt.] Bldg, Chicago, 1896
16 Western Union Bldg,. NYC
17 John A. Roebling: The Brooklyn Bridge, 1883
18 Jacob Riis: How the Other Half Lived (1890)
19 Tenement Slum Living
20 Lodgers Huddled Together
21 Tenement Slum Living
22 Struggling Immigrant Families
23 Mulberry Street Little Italy
24 St. Patrick s Cathedral
25 Hester Street Jewish Section
26 Pell St. - Chinatown, NYC
27 Urban Growth:
28 Mulberry Street Bend, 1889
29 5-Cent Lodgings
30 Men s Lodgings
31 Women s Lodgings
32 Dumbbell Tenement Plan Tenement House Act of 1879, NYC
33 Blind Beggar, 1888
34 Italian Rag-Picker
35 1890s Morgue Basement Saloon
36 Saloon
37 Bandits Roost
38 Mullen s Alley Gang
39 The Street Was Their Playground
40 Lower East Side Immigrant Family
41 A Struggling Immigrant Family
42 Another Struggling Immigrant Family
43 Child Labor
44 Public Fear of Unions/Anarchists
45 Arresting the Girl Strikers for Picketing
46 Scabs Hired
47 The Gross Clinic Thomas Eakins Example of Realism
48 Vassar College
49 Frederick Jackson Turner Frontier thesis Gave Americans their unique character
Chart: Rise of ImmigrantsNotes: US Govt regulates
Rise of Immigration---Why? 1870-1900/ 11 million immigrants from Europe Conflicts with immigrants old immigrants vs. American Protective Association new immigrants 1 st US Laws to restrict immigration
More informationTest Examples. Vertical Integration
Test Examples Vertical Integration Andrew Carnegie used vertical integration when he bought out his suppliers. He not only owned the steel company but also owned the coal fields, iron mines, ore freighters
More informationGive us your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to be free, the wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Coming to America Coming to America Give us your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to be free, the wretched refuse of your teeming shore. This poem by Emma Lazarus is on display at which American
More informationGilded Age Cities. Urban Expansion. Characteristics of Urbanization During the Gilded Age. Chapter 25
Gilded Age Cities Chapter 25 Characteristics of Urbanization During the Gilded Age 1. Metropolises. 2. Mass Transit. 3. Magnet for economic and social opportunities. 4. Pronounced class distinctions. -
More informationChapter 13: The Expansion of American Industry ( )
Name: Period Page# Chapter 13: The Expansion of American Industry (1850 1900) Section 1: A Technological Revolution Why did people s daily lives change in the decades following the Civil War? How did advances
More informationChapter 13: The Expansion of American Industry ( )
Name: Period Page# Chapter 13: The Expansion of American Industry (1850 1900) Section 1: A Technological Revolution Why did people s daily lives change in the decades following the Civil War? How did advances
More informationAmerica at the turn of the Century
America at the turn of the Century Gilding is the process of covering something in a thin layer of Gold, making it seem more valuable than it is. This time period was one of rapid Industrialization and
More informationPhrase penned by Mark Twain as satire for the way America had become. It revealed the best and worst of America.
Phrase penned by Mark Twain as satire for the way America had become. It revealed the best and worst of America. The Gilded Agesuggests that there was a glittering layer of prosperity that covered the
More informationCaptains of Industry or Robber Barons
1. Growth of Industrialization----1865 to 1900 Why? Factors in place Railroad industry Distribution System Symbol of growth Government assists industry ---- 1860 to 1880 laissez faire economy Laws to promote
More informationIMMIGRATION AND URBANIZATION
IMMIGRATION AND URBANIZATION New Immigrants New Immigrants= Southern and Eastern Europeans during 1870s until WWI. Came from Ireland, Germany, Italy, Greece, Poland, Hungary and Russia. Often unskilled,
More informationAmerica: Pathways to the Present. Chapter 6. The Expansion of American Industry ( )
America: Pathways to the Present Chapter 6 The Expansion of American Industry (1850 1900) Copyright 2003 by Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Prentice Hall, Upper Saddle River, New Jersey. All rights
More informationIMMIGRATION AND URBANIZATION
IMMIGRATION AND URBANIZATION Push Factors Push Factors= Things that force/ push people out of a place or land. Drought or famine Political revolutions or wars Religious persecution Economic struggles Pull
More information1 Immigration & Urbanization 2 NEW IMMIGRATION An immigrant was quoted as saying; All of a sudden, we heard a big commotion and we came to America
1 Immigration & Urbanization 2 NEW IMMIGRATION An immigrant was quoted as saying; All of a sudden, we heard a big commotion and we came to America and everybody started yelling they see the Statue of Liberty
More information1 Immigration & Urbanization 2 NEW IMMIGRATION An immigrant was quoted as saying; All of a sudden, we heard a big commotion and we came to America
1 Immigration & Urbanization 2 NEW IMMIGRATION An immigrant was quoted as saying; All of a sudden, we heard a big commotion and we came to America and everybody started yelling they see the Statue of Liberty
More informationWhat s That (Gilded Age) Pic?
What s That (Gilded Age) Pic? Review Questions 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 P i c t u r e 1 Q u e s t i o n s P i c t u r e 2 Q u e s t i o
More informationIMMIGRANTS AND URBANIZATION AMERICA BECOMES A MELTING POT IN THE LATE 19 TH & EARLY 20 TH CENTURY
IMMIGRANTS AND URBANIZATION AMERICA BECOMES A MELTING POT IN THE LATE 19 TH & EARLY 20 TH CENTURY America experienced a large wave of immigration to its shores in the years following the American Civil
More informationImmigration & Urbanization
Immigration & Urbanization Immigration 1870-1910: 20 million immigrants entered the US Added to the labor pool Added to the demand for housing Added to the demand for goods Eastern & Southern Europeans
More informationImmigration & Urbanization NEW IMMIGRATION. New Immigrants 10/2/11. Does this mentality still reign true with today s immigrants? Why?
Immigration & Urbanization NEW IMMIGRATION Does this mentality still reign true with today s immigrants? Why?! An immigrant was quoted as saying; All of a sudden, we heard a big commotion and we came to
More informationEssential Question: What impact did immigration and urbanization have on American life during the Gilded Age ( )?
Essential Question: What impact did immigration and urbanization have on American life during the Gilded Age (1870-1900)? What was immigration like during the Gilded Age? From 1880 to 1921, a record 23
More informationU. S. History Topic 9 Reading Guides Industry and Immigration
1 U. S. History Topic 9 Reading Guides Industry and Immigration Lesson 1: Innovation Boosts Growth Key Terms: Use the textbook or quizlet.com to define the following term entrepreneur free enterprise laissez
More informationUNITED STATES HISTORY Unit 2. Industrialization, Immigration, Urbanization, and The Gilded Age: America in the latter part of the 19 th Century
UNITED STATES HISTORY Unit 2 Industrialization, Immigration, Urbanization, and The Gilded Age: America in the latter part of the 19 th Century Causes of American Industrialization The Expansion of Industry
More informationREVIEWED! APUSH IMMIGRATION & URBANIZATION
APUSH 1865-1900 IMMIGRATION & URBANIZATION REVIEWED! American Pageant (Kennedy)Chapter 25 American History (Brinkley) Chapters 17, 18 America s History (Henretta) Chapters 17, 18,19 GROWTH OF CITIES Huge
More informationIMMIGRANTS AND URBANIZATION AMERICA BECOMES A MELTING POT IN THE LATE 19 TH & EARLY 20 TH CENTURY
IMMIGRANTS AND URBANIZATION AMERICA BECOMES A MELTING POT IN THE LATE 19 TH & EARLY 20 TH CENTURY SECTION 1:THE NEW IMMIGRANTS Millions of immigrants entered the U.S. in the late 19 th and early 20 th
More informationStation #1 - German Immigrants. Station #1 - German Immigrants
Station #1 - German Immigrants Guten tag! We re the Weissbeck farming family from Germany. We came to America a few years ago. Here s how our life is going now. Most of the German immigrants who came to
More informationWarm Up. Complete the Captains of Industry vs. Robber Barons DBQ
Warm Up 1 Complete the Captains of Industry vs. Robber Barons DBQ 2 Be prepared to argue whether the industrial entrepreneurs of the Gilded Age are CI or RB 3 Read the intro to help you answer the questions
More informationStudy Guide Ch 10. 1) Identify
1) Identify Study Guide Ch 10 Robber Baron (define, ID 3) super rich industrialist (owner of a company) Gospel of Wealth Social Darwinism 2) Describe how the Gov. failed in it s duty to protect people
More informationUS History Mr. Martin Unit 7: The Birth of Modern America Chapters 13-16
US History Mr. Martin Unit 7: The Birth of Modern America Chapters 13-16 This unit explores the transformation of the US from a rural nation into an industrial, urban nation during the period from 1865
More informationImmigrant Experience Story 1
Immigrant Experience Story 1 An Italian immigrant, Joseph Baccardo, tells of his experiences upon coming to the United States in the early 1900s. My father was born in 1843, and when he got to be a young
More informationI-The Age of Industry
STRIKE ONE! { Learning Target: I can describe the working conditions that an individual faced when working in factories and why Unions were created to help workers. I-The Age of Industry A-People began
More informationIMMIGRATION & URBANIZATION
IMMIGRATION & URBANIZATION The New Immigrants Immigrants had always come to America for economic opportunity and religious freedom. Until the 1870s, the majority had been Protestants from northern & western
More information2. Industrialization and Urbanization
2. Industrialization and Urbanization 2.1 The Industrial Age, 1877-1920 2.2 Immigration and Urban Life, 1880-1920 2.1 The Industrial Age, 1877-1920 2.1.1 Dreamers 2.1.2 Workers 2.1.3 Corporations 2.1.4
More informationEssential Question: How did the Progressive Era both promote & limit freedom?
Name # Parent Signature: Objectives w/vocabulary - Progress for People 8 th Social Studies DUE DATE: Essential Question: How did the Progressive Era both promote & limit freedom? Where were people who
More informationRoots of Progressivism
Roots of Progressivism Scientific Management data on worker efficiency Created other uses Formalism Conclusions based on theory not investigation Social Darwinists believed in fixed laws Pragmatism Ideas
More informationThe Urbanization of America
The Urbanization of America Urban population of America increased seven fold after Civil War, natural increase accounted for a small part of urban growth, high infant mortality, declining fertility rate,
More informationTHE GILDED AGE. c. Had access to the. I. Rise of Big Business A. Industrial Revolution in US started during the
THE GILDED AGE I. Rise of Big Business A. Industrial Revolution in US started during the 1. Samuel Slater, 2. War of 1812 led to expansion of manufacturing 1800 1814 3. Early manufacturing centered in
More informationProgressive Era ( ) Objective #1. Objective #2. Chapter 28. Discuss the origins and nature of the progressive movement.
Progressive Era (1901-1914) Chapter 28 Objective #1 Discuss the origins and nature of the progressive movement. Objective #2 Examine the responses of the Progressives associated with industrialization
More informationTHE AMERICAN JOURNEY A HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES
THE AMERICAN JOURNEY A HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES Brief Sixth Edition Chapter 18 Industry, Immigrants, and Cities 1870-1900 Industry, Immigrants, and Cities 1870-1900 New Industry New Immigrants New
More informationThe Cities. Unit 1: The Gilded Age ( )
The Cities Unit 1: The Gilded Age (1870-1920) Industrialization Large supplies of natural resources like oil, coal, and steel An explosion of inventions like steam engines, electric power, typewriters,
More informationIndustrialization! &! the Gilded Age. *** Go to Mrs. Lang s teacher page for the recorded lecture!!!
Industrialization! &! the Gilded Age *** Go to Mrs. Lang s teacher page for the recorded lecture!!! Essential Question How did industrialization bring both positive and negative changes? Technological
More informationCh. 4 Industrialization, 5.4 Populism, 6.1 Politics of the Gilded Age Quiz 2011
Ch. 4 Industrialization, 5.4 Populism, 6.1 Politics of the Gilded Age Quiz 2011 Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question. IDENTIFYING MAIN IDEAS 1.
More informationU.S. INDUSTRIALISM. Chap 9
U.S. INDUSTRIALISM Chap 9 How did the US industrialize? Plenty of raw materials needed for industry: water, wood, coal, iron, copper Large workforce: population tripled between 1860-1910 Technology and
More informationGoals (Plan) Benchmarks. Vocab?s(due Friday, Feb 26) % Vocab Quiz (Tuesday, March 8) % Checkpoint (Wednesday, March 9) % Test (Friday, March 11) %
My Reconstruction Goal % My Reconstruction achievement % I met my personal goal last unit! My goal is increasing this unit! I did not meet my personal goal last unit. The number 1 reason for my achievement
More informationIndustry Comes of Age
Industry Comes of Age lroad: Millionaires look for areas to invest their capital + patents were issued at high rates = Key inventions: - Phone (Alexander Bell); leads to women working the switchboard
More informationIMMIGRANTS IN AMERICA
IMMIGRANTS IN AMERICA 1820-1930 Millions of immigrants moved to the United States in the late 1800 s & early 1900 s. IMMIGRATION The act of coming into a new country in order to settle there EMIGRANT
More informationExample: In the late 1800s, most of the nation's rapidly growing cities were located in Northeast and Midwest. true
Page 1 Write the letter of the term that best answers the question. A term may be used more than once or not at all. a. Ellis Island c. Angel Island e. Chinese Exclusion Act b. melting pot d. culture shock
More informationEmergence of Modern America: 1877 to 1930s
VUS.8a Emergence of Modern America: 1877 to 1930s What factors influenced American growth and expansion in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century? In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries,
More informationGilded Age Level 2
Gilded Age 1870-1900 Level 2 Presidents of the Gilded Age U.S. Grant 1869-1877 Rutherford B. Hayes 1877-1881 James Garfield 1881 Chester A. Arthur 1881-1885 Grover Cleveland 1885-1889 and 1893-1897 Benjamin
More informationChapter 13 Section 4 T H E G R E A T S T R I K E S
Chapter 13 Section 4 T H E G R E A T S T R I K E S Gulf Between Rich and Poor In 1890, the richest 9% of Americans held nearly 75% of the nation s wealth The average worker could earn only a few hundred
More informationGilded Age: Immigration/ Urbanization. Immigration LIFE IN THE NEW LAND. Chapter 7-1, 2
Gilded Age: Immigration/ Urbanization Chapter 7-1, 2 Immigration 1870-1920: immigrants came to U.S. from Europe 75% moved to Northeast Old Immigrants v. New Immigrants (Western European countries such
More informationMcClure 2 b. Workingman s Party of i. anti- immigration ii. founded by immigrant 4. Impact a. 1882: federal law banned convicts, paupers, & ill b. Chi
McClure 1 Urban America 1865-1896 I. Immigration A. Europeans Flood the US 1. Intro a. by 1890s, more than ½ of all immigrants from & southern Europe b. including 14 million 1860-1900 2. Reasons for Immigration
More informationUS History Mr. Martin Unit 7: The Birth of Modern America Chapters 13-16
US History Mr. Martin Unit 7: The Birth of Modern America Chapters 13-16 This unit explores the transformation of the US from a rural nation into an industrial, urban nation during the period from 1865
More informationBIG BUSINESS AND LABOR A NEW INDUSTRIAL AGE
BIG BUSINESS AND LABOR A NEW INDUSTRIAL AGE CARNEGIE S INNOVATIONS CARNEGIE MAKES A FORTUNE Andrew Carnagie: one of first moguls to make own fortune Carnegie searches for ways to make better products more
More informationGilded Age Day 4: Urbanization, Immigration, and political machines
Gilded Age Day 4: Urbanization, Immigration, and political machines Urbanization and Immigration is covered well in Amsco ch. 18 if you need some further reading. Framework: The migrations that accompanied
More informationAge of Growth and Disorder, s
Age of Growth and Disorder, 1877-1910s Naming Robber Barons, Gilded Age Industrialism Triumphant Examine from several POV: G & D What 2 nd Industrial Revolution Increase in production 2 nd Wave of Immigration
More informationSample Test: Immigration, Political Machines and Progressivism Test
Sample Test: Immigration, Political Machines and Progressivism Test Multiple Choice: 1. Which people were known as the new immigrants? A. Immigrants from Southern and Eastern Europe. B. People who had
More informationEssential Question: Was the rise of industry good for the American workers?
Essential Question: Was the rise of industry good for the American workers? Vocabulary: 1. Bessemer process 2. Horizontal integration 3. Vertical integration 4. Laissez-faire 5. Social Darwinsim act 7.
More informationUNIT 1 SYLLABUS: INDUSTRIALIZATION, IMMIGRATION, AND URBANIZATION
2015-2016 UNIT 1 SYLLABUS: INDUSTRIALIZATION, IMMIGRATION, AND URBANIZATION Day Date In class Assignment W 8-19 Introduction and Course Expectations See first day procedure Th 8-20 Textbook distribution
More informationWorking Conditions, Unions and Strikes
Working Conditions, Unions and Strikes Working conditions in American Factories at the turn of the century Long hours: 12-14 hours and 6-7 days a week. Employees were not entitled to vacation, sick leave,
More informationThe Americans (Reconstruction to the 21st Century)
The Americans (Reconstruction to the 21st Century) Chapter 6: TELESCOPING THE TIMES A New Industrial Age CHAPTER OVERVIEW Technological innovations and the growth of the railroad industry help fuel an
More informationSWBAT. Explain why and how immigrants came to the US in the Gilded Age Describe the immigrant experience and contributions
Immigration SWBAT Explain why and how immigrants came to the US in the Gilded Age Describe the immigrant experience and contributions Immigration Many immigrants came to this country because of job availability
More information10/4/2016 (59) America moves to the city The Gilded Age The Gilded Age ( ) US history Khan Academy
America moves to the city The industrial boom of the late nineteenth century led Americans and immigrants from the world over to leave farming life and head to the city. Share Tweet Email Overview Americans
More informationSSUSH12A; 13B and 14A Urban Society during the Gilded Age
SSUSH12A; 13B and 14A Urban Society during the Gilded Age Immigration By the 1890 s more than half of America s immigrants came from Europe. Europeans abandoned their homelands to come to America due to
More informationDeflation deflation,
Unions Deflation Between 1865 and 1897, the United States experienced deflation, or a rise in the value of money Deflation caused prices to fall and companies to cut wages To the workers, it seemed their
More informationImmigrants from Japan 1. Many were recruited by Hawaiian planters 2. Came to the mainland in search of high American wages
Ch 7 Immigrants and Urbanization Section 1 The New Immigrants Immigrants from Europe 1. 1870-1920, 20 million Europeans arrived in the U.S. 2. Before 1890 most came from Great Britain, Ireland, and Germany
More informationName: Date: Period: VUS. 8 a&b: Westward Expansion and Industrialization. Filled In. Notes VUS. 8a&b: Westward Expansion and Industrialization 1
Name: Date: Period: VUS 8 a&b: Westward Expansion and Industrialization Filled In Notes VUS 8a&b: Westward Expansion and Industrialization 1 Objectives about Westward Expansion and Industrialization VUS8
More informationName. Europeans Flood Into the United States
Name Chapter 10 Annotations Immigration & Urbanization As you read, annotate the text with any thoughts, questions, or comments that you have. Include AT LEAST four (4) annotations per page. Write your
More informationUNIONS CHAPTER 3 US HISTORY (EOC)
UNIONS CHAPTER 3 US HISTORY (EOC) ESSENTIAL QUESTION: WHAT IMPACT DID SCIENTIFIC DISCOVERIES AND MANUFACTURING PROCESSES HAVE ON THE NATURE OF WORK, THE AMERICAN LABOR MOVEMENT, AND AMERICAN BUSINESSES?
More informationChapter 14. Immigration and Urbanization
Chapter 14 Immigration and Urbanization 1. The New Immigrants Early immigrants had been primarily protestant (Germany); Catholics from Ireland learned to speak English and assimilated; many settled on
More informationBetween 1870 and 1920, about 20 million. Most of the new immigrants moved to the. Immigrants and Urbanization
Name Date CHAPTER 15 Summary TELESCOPING THE TIMES Immigrants and Urbanization CHAPTER OVERVIEW The population rises as immigrants supply a willing workforce for urban industrialization and a political
More informationAn Urban Society
An Urban Society 1865-1914 The New Immigrants Why did they move? Push and Pull Factors Push: something that is making you want to leave your country War, famine, civil rights Pull: something that makes
More informationMessage: Irish immigrants are making demands to change America to make it more favorable to themselves
Irish Immigration Message: Irish immigrants are making demands to change America to make it more favorable to themselves Imagery: Irish as apes, alcoholic, violence (Keg of gunpowder) Context: Irish had
More informationAMERICAN HISTORY URBAN AMERICA
AMERICAN HISTORY URBAN AMERICA 1865-1896 BOARD QUESTIONS 1) WHERE WAS ELLIS ISLAND? 2) WHERE WAS ANGEL ISLAND? 3) WHERE WERE IMMIGRANT COMING FROM IN THE 1880 S AND 1890 S? 4) WHAT WAS THE AMERICAN PROTECTIVE
More information1 New York city, NY 4,766,883 2,822,526 1,944, Chicago city, IL 2,185,283 1,401, ,
URBANIZATION 1 Rank Place Total Native 1910 Foreign born Number Percent 1 New York city, NY 4,766,883 2,822,526 1,944,357 40.8 2 Chicago city, IL 2,185,283 1,401,855 783,428 35.9 3 Philadelphia city, PA
More informationSTANDARD VUS.8a. Essential Questions What factors influenced American growth and expansion in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century?
STANDARD VUS.8a through the early twentieth century by explaining the relationship among territorial expansion, westward movement of the population, new immigration, growth of cities, and the admission
More informationCHAPTER 24 The Industrial Age,
CHAPTER 24 The Industrial Age, 1865 1900 1. Railroad Expansion (pp. 528-536) a. The government gave away land bigger than the state of to various railroad companies. What benefits did the government get
More informationS apt ect er ion 25 1 Section 1 hnology nd Industrial Growth
Chapter 13 Objectives Analyze the factors that led to the industrialization of the United States in the late 1800s. Explain how new inventions and innovations changed Americans lives. Describe the impact
More informationGilded Age: Urbanization
Gilded Age: Urbanization Chapter 7-1, 2, 4 Characteristics of Cities During the Gilded Age Rapidly expanding outward and upward Improved transportation networks Economic and Cultural center Distinct social
More informationAMERICA MOVES TO THE CITY,
AMERICA MOVES TO THE CITY, 1865-1900 1900 THE URBAN FRONTIER 1870-1890 1890 US Population doubles Population of cities tripled By 1900, 40% of Americans lived in cities of more than 2500 In 1860, no US
More informationIdentify the reasons immigration to the United States increased in the late 1800s.
Objectives Identify the reasons immigration to the United States increased in the late 1800s. Describe the difficulties immigrants faced adjusting to their new lives. Discuss how immigrants assimilated
More informationName: Period: Date: Industrial Revolution Exam. Directions: Chose the best possible answer for the questions below.
Name: Period: Date: Industrial Revolution Exam Directions: Chose the best possible answer for the questions below. 1. Changes that occurred between 1865 and 1914, when machines replaced hand tools, was
More informationPolitical, Economic, and Social Change
Political, Economic, and Social Change 1 2 Mark Twain Why a Gilded Age? From a satirical novel written with Charles D. Warner, The Gilded Age: A Tale of Today 1873. Meaning the prosperity and culture that
More informationChapter 14. A New Industrial Age
Chapter 14 A New Industrial Age Section 1: A New Industrial Age Industry Expands Period between Civil War and 1920s Industrial Boom Natural Resources Government Support Urban Population: Exploiting Natural
More informationLabor Unrest Unionization and the Populist Party. The Changing American Labor Force 1/6/15. Chapters 23-24
Labor Unrest Unionization and the Populist Party Chapters 23-24 The Changing American Labor Force By 1880, 5 million people worked in factories. What were the working conditions like? Unsafe: 1882-675
More informationUNIT 1 SYLLABUS: INDUSTRIALIZATION, IMMIGRATION, AND URBANIZATION
2017-2018 UNIT 1 SYLLABUS: INDUSTRIALIZATION, IMMIGRATION, AND URBANIZATION Day Date Procedures W 8-23 Introduction and Course Expectations See first day procedure folder Th 8-24 Textbook distribution
More informationIMMIGRANTS AND URBANIZATION AMERICA BECOMES A MELTING POT IN THE LATE 19 TH & EARLY 20 TH CENTURY
IMMIGRANTS AND URBANIZATION AMERICA BECOMES A MELTING POT IN THE LATE 19 TH & EARLY 20 TH CENTURY Gumball Immigration Discussion Questions 1. How many immigrants does the U.S. let in each year? 2. Do you
More informationMonday, October 24, Immigrants
Immigrants Scandinavia=11% Germany=25% Other=24% Where the immigrants came from 25% 25% 11% 16% Ireland=16% 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Japan=1% China=1% 1% 1% 2% 3% 4% Italy=5% 5% 8% England=8% Mexico=2%
More informationUN#2: Immigration, Urbanization, & Unionization Key Terms (Answer Key) Chapter 6, Sections 1 & 2 and Chapter 5, Section 4
Answer Key Name: Hour: UN#2: Immigration, Urbanization, & Unionization Key Terms (Answer Key) Chapter 6, Sections 1 & 2 and Chapter 5, Section 4 Push Factors: Religious Oppression, Political Oppression,
More informationIndustry Comes of Age Chapter 24
Industry Comes of Age 1865-1900 Chapter 24 The Iron Colt Becomes an Iron Horse Is there more power in BUSINESS or POLITICS? Surge in railroad development 1865 35,000 miles of track 1900 over 192,000 miles
More informationChapter 18 Lecture Outline
Chapter 18 Lecture Outline Big Business and Organized Labor 2013 W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. Chapter 18 Lecture Outline Big Business and Organized Labor 2013 W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. Robber Barons
More informationLabor Unrest Unionization and the Populist Party. The Changing American Labor Force 12/17/12. Chapters 23-24
Labor Unrest Unionization and the Populist Party Chapters 23-24 The Changing American Labor Force By 1880, 5 million people worked in factories. What were the working conditions like? Unsafe: 1882-675
More informationChapter 16. Wonder and Woe The Rise of Industrial America
Chapter 16 Wonder and Woe The Rise of Industrial America 1865-1900 The Emergence of Big Business Sources of the Industrial Revolution Enormous quantities of two essential items for industrialization 1.
More informationWonder and Woe The Rise of Industrial America CHAPTER 18
Wonder and Woe The Rise of Industrial America 1865-1900 CHAPTER 18 World s Fair Chicago 1892 Results of American industrial, culture, and commerce dominance. AC/DC debate Chicago World s Fair: display
More informationINDUSTRY COMES OF AGE CHAPTER 24
INDUSTRY COMES OF AGE CHAPTER 24 Railroad Boom By 1900 the U.S. had more track than all of Europe combined 1890 Govt. Help for Railroads The U.S. govt encouraged railroad building in a # of ways Gave RR
More information6th Immigration test. P a g e 1. Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question.
P a g e 1 6th Immigration test Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1. Along with economic troubles, what condition drove many people to emigrate?
More informationUNIT 2. Industrialization, Immigration, and the Gilded Age
UNIT 2 Industrialization, Immigration, and the Gilded Age -Switch from manpower to machine power - Great Britain leads the way; US catches up in latter 19 th century - factors of production needed for
More informationAmerica Moves to the City. Chapter 25
America Moves to the City Chapter 25 Essential Question for today How did the lack of big business regulation during the Gilded Age affect American working class. In the words of Jacob Riis how did the
More informationUS History Unit 3 Exam Industrialization, Immigration & Progressive Era 76 Pts
US History Unit 3 Exam Industrialization, Immigration & Progressive Era 76 Pts Multiple Choice: 1. Which of the following reasons contributed to the success of industrial giants such as John Rockefeller
More informationWhat is the city but the people?
INTERPRET: What is the city but the people? - William Shakespeare UNIT 2 - day 8 URBANIZATION first thing s first... WHY THE CITY? URBAN OPPORTUNITIES ABUNDANCE OF JOBS Industrialization and factories
More informationAMERICA - NEIL DIAMOND
AMERICA - NEIL DIAMOND Far We've been traveling far Without a home But not without a star Free Only want to be free We huddle close Hang on to a dream On the boats and on the planes They're coming to America
More information7. Source: THE IMMIGRANT: THE STRANGER AT OUR GATE, The Ram's Horn Press, 1899
1. A parallel can be drawn between the federal government's treatment of Native Americans and immigrants of Asian descent as a likely commentary on A) racism and nativism in the U.S. enduring in different
More information