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The New American Culture: 1880-1910

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The New American Culture: 1880-1910 What technologies allowed for the development of the modern city? How did immigrants play a role in building America? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The New American Culture: 1880-1910


1
The New American Culture1880-1910
  • What technologies allowed for the development of
    the modern city?
  • How did immigrants play a role in building
    America?
  • What were important parts of the new American
    culture?

2
SCIENCE AND URBAN LIFE
  • By the turn of the 20th century, four out of ten
    Americans lived in cities
  • In response to urbanization, technological
    advances began to meet communication,
    transportation, and space demands

Artist Annie Bandez
3
1. SKYSCRAPERS
  • Skyscrapers emerged after two critical
    inventions elevators (Elisha Otis) steel
    skeletons that bear weight (William Jenney)
  • Skyscrapers were actually born in Chicagonot New
    York!
  • Famous architects
  • Daniel Burnham
  • Louis Sullivan
  • The skyscraper was Americas greatest
    contribution to architecture and solved the issue
    of how to best use limited and expensive space

Flatiron Building - 1902
4
2. ELECTRIC TRANSIT
  • Changes in transportation allowed cities to
    spread outward
  • By the turn of the century, intricate networks of
    electric streetcars (trolley) ran from outlying
    neighborhoods to downtown offices stores
  • A few large cities like Chicago moved their
    streetcars far above street level, creating
    elevated or el trains
  • Other cities built subways by moving their rail
    lines underground (subways)

5
3. BRIDGES PARKS
  • Steel-cable suspension bridges, like the Brooklyn
    Bridge, also brought cities sections closer
  • Some urban planners sought to include landscaped
    areas parks
  • Frederick Law Olmsted was instrumental in drawing
    up plans for Central Park and the 1893 Worlds
    Fair

Central Park is an oasis among Manhattans
skyscrapers
6
AIRPLANES
  • In the early 20th century, brothers Orville and
    Wilbur Wright, experimented with engines and
    aircrafts
  • Originally owned bicycle shops
  • They built a biplane December 17, 1903 they flew
    their plane for 12 seconds covering 120 feet
  • Within two years the brothers were making 30
    minute flights
  • By 1920, the U.S. was using airmail flights
    regularly

Actual photo of Wright Brothers first flight
7
EXPANDING PUBLIC EDUCATION
  • Unlike African Americans, immigrants were
    encouraged to go to school
  • Most immigrants sent their children to public
    schools
  • Many adult immigrants attended night schools to
    learn English
  • Between 1880-1920 college enrollments more than
    quadrupled
  • Professional schools were established for law and
    medicine
  • Between 1865-1895, states required 3-4 months of
    annual education
  • curriculum was poor and the teachers were usually
    not qualified
  • High schools expanded their curriculum to include
    science, civics and social studies
  • By 1900 500,000 teen-agers were enrolled in high
    schools

8
DAWN OF A MASS CULTURE
  • The new middle class could escape city
    congestion and dull industrial work with their
    higher wages
  • Birth of leisure activities
  • To meet the recreational needs of city dwellers,
    Chicago, NYC and other cities began setting aside
    land for parks
  • Central Park
  • Amusement parks were constructed on the outskirts
    of cities
  • Coney Island was Americas most famous amusement
    park
  • After the introduction of the safety bike in
    1885, Americans increasingly enjoyed biking
  • By 1890, 312 companies made over 10,000,000 bikes

9
SPECTATOR SPORTS
  • Americans not only participated in new sports,
    but became avid fans of spectator sports
  • Baseball and boxing became profitable businesses
  • Mark Twain called baseball, the very symbol of
    the booming 19th century
  • Famous baseball players
  • Candy Cummings
  • George Bradley
  • Famous boxers
  • John Sullivan
  • Gentleman Jim Corbett
  • Jack Dempsey

10
PROMOTING FINE ARTS
  • By 1900, free circulating Public libraries
    numbered in the thousands
  • Major philanthropy by CarnegieNY Library
  • By 1900, most major cities had art galleries
  • In the early 20th century, the Ashcan School of
    American Art painted urban life
  • Famous artists
  • Robert Henri
  • George Wesley Bellows
  • Edward Hopper

11
MAGAZINES and NEWSPAPERS
  • By 1890, the literacy rate in the U.S. was nearly
    90
  • Advances in printing, aviation, and photography
    helped speed the transfer of information
  • Mills produce huge quantities of cheap paper from
    wood pulp
  • Electric presses printed on both sides of paper
    at the same time
  • Mass production made newspapers and magazines
    more affordable (most papers sold for 1 cent)
  • led to the publication of millions of books,
    magazines, and newspapers
  • Joseph Pulitzer and William Randolph Hearst
    leading publishers and created Yellow
    Journalism to gain attention
  • Yellow Journalism included huge, sensational,
    exaggerated headlines

12
POPULAR FICTION
  • Dime novels were popular inexpensive
  • Most of these focused on adventure tales and
    heroes of the west
  • Some readers preferred a more realistic portrayal
    of the American West and South
  • Famous authors
  • Mark Twain
  • Jack London
  • Willa Cather

13
PHOTOGRAPHY EXPLOSION
  • Before 1880, photography was a professional
    activity
  • Expensive to produce pictures
  • Usually set/developed on metal (tintypes)
  • Subjects could not move and the film had to be
    developed immediately
  • Most newspapers used drawings (lithographs) to
    illustrate
  • George Eastman invented lighter weight equipment
    and more versatile film
  • In 1888, Eastman introduced his Kodak Camera
  • The 25 camera came with 100-picture roll of film

1888 Kodak
14
GROWING CONSUMERISM
  • The turn of the century witnessed the beginnings
    of the shopping center, department and chain
    stores, and the birth of modern advertising
  • CHAIN STORES 1870s F.W. Woolworth found that if
    he offered an item at a low price, the consumer
    would purchase it on the spur of the moment
  • By 1911, the Woolworth chain had 596 stores and
    sold 1,000,000 per week
  • Marshall Field of Chicago brought the first
    department store to America
  • Field also pioneered the bargain basement
    concept

15
ADVERTISING
  • Ads appeared in newspapers, magazines and on
    billboards
  • Expenditures for advertising increased to 95
    mil. in 1900
  • Montgomery Ward and Sears were two pioneers in
    catalog sales
  • By 1910, 10 million Americans shopped by mail
  • In 1896 the Post Office introduced a rural free
    delivery (RFD) system that brought packages
    directly to every home
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