Industrial America A Nation Transformed

Similar documents
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

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

Immigration & Urbanization NEW IMMIGRATION. New Immigrants 10/2/11. Does this mentality still reign true with today s immigrants? Why?

Immigration and Urbanization ( ) Chapter 10 P

Gilded Age: Urbanization

AMERICAN HISTORY URBAN AMERICA

Immigration & Urbanization

Section 1. Chapter 14

Gilded Age: Immigration/ Urbanization. Immigration LIFE IN THE NEW LAND. Chapter 7-1, 2

Name. Europeans Flood Into the United States

Chapter 14. Immigration and Urbanization

Chapter 19: Toward an Urban Society,

Chapter Introduction Section 1 Immigration Section 2 Urbanization. Click on a hyperlink to view the corresponding slides.

An Urban Society

Chapter 21: A New Urban Culture ( ) (American Nation Textbook Pages )

Alan Brinkley, AMERICAN HISTORY 13/e. Chapter Eighteen: The Age of the City

Essential Question: Was the rise of industry good for the American workers?

Section 1: The New Immigrants (pages ) A. The foreign-born population of the U.S. nearly doubled. 3. But starting in, some people

Essential Question: What impact did immigration and urbanization have on American life during the Gilded Age ( )?

IMMIGRATION & URBANIZATION

Gilded Age Cities. Urban Expansion. Characteristics of Urbanization During the Gilded Age. Chapter 25

Immigrant Stories SFI Practice

Immigrants and Urbanization: Immigration. Chapter 15, Section 1

SSUSH12A; 13B and 14A Urban Society during the Gilded Age

4. I was the most famous Ragtime artist/composer of the Gilded Age. My famous hits include Mapleleaf Rag and The Entertainer

Immigration and Discrimination. Effects of the Industrial Revolution

Mrs. Morgan s Class. (and how it works)

tenement A high-density, cheap, five- or sixstory housing unit designed for working-class urban populations. In the late nineteenth and early twentiet

New Immigrants. Chapter 15 Section 1 Life at the Turn of the 20th Century Riddlebarger

McClure 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

Chapter 17. Essential Question. Who were the progressives, and how did they address the problems they saw? 17.1

IRISH PRIDE Page 1 HCHS

Identify the reasons immigration to the United States increased in the late 1800s.

REVIEWED! APUSH IMMIGRATION & URBANIZATION

1 New York city, NY 4,766,883 2,822,526 1,944, Chicago city, IL 2,185,283 1,401, ,

Gilded Age Urbanization, Immigration, and Culture. Reference Ch18 AMSCO

SWBAT. Explain why and how immigrants came to the US in the Gilded Age Describe the immigrant experience and contributions

Great Migration. Largest mass movement in history = 23 mil immigrants arrived in America between

Chapter 18: The Lure of the Cities

Terms and People new immigrant steerage Ellis Island Angel Island

A Flood of Immigrants

2014 IMMIGRATION & URBANIZATION PROJECT CHOICES AND INFO

new immigrants assimilate steerage Ellis Island sweatshops Chinese Exclusion Act Julia Clifford Lathrop

Test Examples. Vertical Integration

Where Did You Come From? Immigration to the United States Chapter 15.1

*Assassination Videos*

Gilded Age Day 4: Urbanization, Immigration, and political machines

What is the city but the people?

Chapter 15: Politics, Immigration, and Urban Life ( )

IMMIGRANTS IN AMERICA

The Largest mass movement in Human History - From 1880 to 1921, a record-setting 23 million immigrants arrived on America s shores in what one

Section 1: The New Immigrants

HPISD CURRICULUM (SOCIAL STUDIES, UNITED STATES HISTORY) EST. NUMBER OF DAYS:10 DAYS UNIT NAME

IMMIGRATION AND URBANIZATION

Chapter 14, Section 1 Immigrants and Urban Challenges

Work Period: Immigration and the Progressive Era Notes Political Cartoon Analysis EOC Coach Activity

AMERICA MOVES TO THE CITY. Chapter 25 AP US History

Period 6: Key Concept 6.1: Technological advances, large-scale production methods, and the opening of new markets encouraged the rise of

The Americans (Survey)

KEY TERMS, PEOPLE, AND PLACES

VUS.10a: The Roaring 20s

UNIT 1 SYLLABUS: INDUSTRIALIZATION, IMMIGRATION, AND URBANIZATION

Example: In the late 1800s, most of the nation's rapidly growing cities were located in Northeast and Midwest. true

UNIT 1 SYLLABUS: INDUSTRIALIZATION, IMMIGRATION, AND URBANIZATION

IMMIGRANTS AND URBANIZATION AMERICA BECOMES A MELTING POT IN THE LATE 19 TH & EARLY 20 TH CENTURY

Strains of Urban Life

PERIOD 6: This era corresponds to information in Unit 10 ( ) and Unit 11 ( )

VUS. 8.c&d: Immigration, Discrimination, and The Progressive Era

Sample Test: Immigration, Political Machines and Progressivism Test

Reading Essentials and Study Guide

A) Following the Civil War, government subsidies for transportation and communication systems helped open new markets in North America.

America Moves to the City. Chapter 25

U. S. History Topic 9 Reading Guides Industry and Immigration

Give us your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to be free, the wretched refuse of your teeming shore.

Immigration and the Peopling of the United States

The Urbanization of America

Chapter Nineteen. The Incorporation of America

IMMIGRATION AND URBANIZATION

THE AMERICAN JOURNEY A HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES

Unit II Test.tgt, Version: 1 1

Name: Period: Date: Industrial Revolution Exam. Directions: Chose the best possible answer for the questions below.

What s That (Gilded Age) Pic?

Gilded Age & Society. Ms. Ramos Alta Loma High School * PPT adapted from PPT Palooza

SSUSH11 Examine connections between the rise of big business, the growth of labor unions, and technological innovations. a. Explain the effects of

America s History Eighth Edi(on America: A Concise History Sixth Edi(on

Reasons to Immigrate:

History 1302 U.S. From Unit 1 Lecture 3 ~ America

APUSH Period 6:

Urban America. Chapter 13 Test, Form A. Name Date Class

Monday, October 24, Immigrants

CHAPTER EIGHTEEN THE AGE OF THE CITY Objectives A thorough study of Chapter 18 should enable the student to understand: 1. The patterns and processes

THROUGH ELLIS ISLAND AND ANGEL ISLAND. How was life as an immigrant coming to the USA

America: Pathways to the Present. Chapter 8. Politics, Immigration, and Urban Life ( )

Create Your Cover Page on The Roaring Twenties Page1

Narrative Flow of the Unit

Industrial Revolution. Lecture Notes

How did conditions in eastern Europe in the late 1800s lead to an increase in Jewish immigration?

Immigration Unit Vocabulary 1. Old Immigrants: Immigrants from Northern European countries.

The Americans (Reconstruction to the 21st Century)

The Immigrant Experience American Immigration from

Transcription:

Industrial America A Nation Transformed 1860-1910 1. The Western Crossroads 1860-1910 2. The Second Industrial Revolution 1865-1905 3. The Transformation of American Society 1865-1910 Hey Mikey Boylan! What Kyle Williams? Look at this class. Boy, do they got it Easy! Yeah, Kyle I wish I could read! This looks like Josh Codis

Transformation of American Society 1865-1910 1. The New Immigrants 2. The Urban World 3. Daily life in the Cities During the late 1800 s, industrialization, innovation, and advances in technology led to the transformation of American life.

1860-1910 1. A New Wave of Immigration From 1800 to 1880, 10 million immigrants came to the United States. Most were Protestants from northwestern Europe, known as old immigrants. Between 1891 and 1910, some 12 million immigrants came to the United States. 60% of people living in U.S. cities were foreign. 70% of these immigrants were from southern or eastern Europe. Most traveled in the poorest accommodations called steerages.

1860-1910 Arriving in America Millions arrived in late 1800 s at Ellis Island in New York Harbor and Angel Island in San Francisco. Many arrived and settled in crowed and diverse cities where they found only lowpaying, unskilled jobs. Residents in many cities formed religious and non religious aid organizations, known as benevolent societies, to help immigrants with many types of care, such as education, medical care, and jobs.

1860-1910 The Natives Response Many native-born citizens saw immigration workers as a threat and blamed them for much of the working doings of society. Many believed that immigrants willingness to work cheaply robbed Americans of jobs and lowered wages for all.

Nativist s and Immigration 1860-1910 Nativists achieved great success in the west with immigration restriction laws against the Chinese. In 1882, Congress passed the Chinese Exclusion Act, which denied citizenship to people born in China and prohibited the immigration of Chinese laborers. In 1894, the Immigration Restriction League sought to impose literacy tests to all immigrants. Despite all the restrictions to the Chinese and other immigrants, the rapid industrialization of the United States would not have been achieved without the immigrant workers.

2. Changing from a Rural Society to an Urban Society 1860-1910 By the late 1800 s, new technological advances began to transform the urban landscape. A vast population growth of the city between 1865 and 1900 changed the facet of the city. Architects built skyscrapers, or large, multistory buildings, to accommodate for the dramatic increase of populations in the city.

1860-1910 The Elevator In 1853, Elisha Otis developed a mechanized elevator that made it easy for architects to construct skyscrapers. While skyscrapers extended cities upward, mass transit extended cities outward. Mass transit made it much easier for workers to get to work faster and live farther away. The expansion of transportation to areas beyond the city hub, led to the growth of suburbs, residential neighborhoods on the outskirts of cities.

1860-1910 Three Classes Three classes emerged; the Upper, the Middle, and the Lower.

1860-1910 Upper Class The nouveau riche (noo-voh REESH), French meaning newly rich, was the urban upper class who quickly earned fortunes on the newly formed industries. Many of the upper class spent their money freely so that all new how successful they were. This behavior was coined conspicuous consumption and many Americans criticized their behavior.

1860-1910 Middle Class By the late 1800 s the middle class was swelled by doctors, lawyers, small business owners and accountants, clerks, engineers, and managers. Women even joined the ranks of the middle class on a small scale. Girls, what do you carry in your purse?

1860-1910 Lower Class Life Tenements, poorly built apartment buildings, housed many of the cities poor, in NYC, nearly half the population. These rundown buildings were clustered in poor neighborhoods.

1860-1910 Jane Addams The Drive for Reform To confront the problem of urban poverty, settlement houses, community service centers, were established in poor communities and offered residents educational opportunities, skills training, and cultural events. Jane Addams was influential in setting up American settlement-housing. She set out and improved living conditions in many poor neighborhoods. Janie Porter Barrett founded the first African American settlement house. Janie Porter Barrett

1860-1910 Social Gospel The Social Gospel was an idea that called for people to apply Christian principles to address social problems. Many churches provided classes, counseling, job training and applied the Social Gospel. Caroline Bartlett organized the People s Church in Michigan and provided free public kindergarten as well as set up meals programs for workers. Caroline Bartlett

3. Daily Life in Cities 1860-1910 It must be admitted unhesitatingly that we are only just learning how to play. We steal away for our holidays... determined to rest and take life at its easiest. We promise ourselves to forswear all thoughts of business and the outer world. Casper W. Whitney, Harper s New Monthly Magazine, December 1894

Education 1860-1910 Social reformers tried to expand educational opportunities. The Compulsory Education Laws were laws that required parents to send children to school. Attendance at schools rose from 7 million to 15 million in a span of thirty years. Philosopher John Dewey set out to change the traditional school. His Laboratory School at the University of Chicago stressed cooperative learning by doing. He not only emphasized reading, writing, and mathematics, but he also emphasized the arts, history, and sciences. The number of American colleges and enrollments rose as well from about 500 to 1000 universities. John Dewey

1860-1910 Publishing The rise of literacy among Americans led to an age of publishing. The sale of newspapers between 1865 and 1910 increased from about 500 to 2,600. Yellow Journalism referred to the hugely popular cartoon, The Yellow Kid, which was used to attract readers. It was about a young tenement-dweller who reflected stereotypes many Americans had about immigrants. In His Steps, written by Charles M. Sheldon, was the era s most popular book, selling millions of copies. What would Jesus do?

1860-1910 Leisure and Sports During the late 1800 s, Americans increasingly counted on leisure, or free time to provide relief from city life/work. In 1857, landscape architect Frederick Law Olmstead designed Central Park in New York City. His success spawned the City Beautiful Movement, which stressed the importance of public parks and attractive boulevards in the design of cities.

Baseball 1860-1910 The basic organization and rules of the game evolved in the mid- 1800 s from the British game rounder s. 1869-Aaron Champion organized the Cincinnati Red Stockings, the first baseball team. Baseball had become the national game of the United States.

1860-1910 Football Football was developed in the late 1800 s, in upper class New England schools. Walter Camp, a Yale football player, mad significant contributions to the game.

1860-1910 Basketball James Naismith, in 1891, invented the game of basketball. The physical education teacher created a game that could occupy students during the winter month.

Entertainment Many Americans spent much leisure time enjoying theater and music. 1860-1910

Theater 1860-1910 Edwin Booth, a premier actor of the day, portrayed many Shakespeare tragic heroes. Vaudeville- French word meaning light play; featured a wide selection of shorts.

1860-1910 Your next act, the One the only, the Acts of all acts, the Entertainer of all Entertainers, the Artist of all artists, Ladies and gentleman, From Allentown, Pa,

Music-Ragtime 1860-1910 This style of music was created by African Americans in the 1890 s. The King of Ragtime, Scott Joplin, Maple Leaf Rag.