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Life in America at the Turn of the Century

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Title: Life in America at the Turn of the Century


1
Life in America at the Turn of the Century
  • Minority Issues, Social Life

2
A. Minority Issues
  • Three groups of people faced minority
  • issues during the late 19th century
  • 1. Native Americans U.S. govt interaction with
    the Indians mainly focused on getting them onto
    the reservations and assimilating them into the
    American culture. This caused many clashes
    between the two groups.

3
2. African Americans
  • a. States used segregation to ensure that African
    Americans were treated as second-class citizens.
  • i. The separation was a result of customs, which
    means it was de facto (conditions that exist in
    fact, but not actually in law).

4
  • b. Jim Crow Laws state and local segregation
    laws enacted mostly in the South in the period of
    1876-1965.
  • (Du jure segregation)
  • c. De facto segregation was occurring in the
    North, too, with segregation and discrimination
    occurring in schools, housing, and employment.

5
d. Booker T Washington (1856 - 1915)
  • 1. A former slave, Washington would rise to
    prominence in America during the late 1800s.
  • 2. He headed the Tuskegee Institute, a college
    for African Americans, which opened in 1881 in
    AL.
  • 3. Advocated economic independence for African
    Americans through self-help, hard work, and a
    practical education

6
  • Imagine this in the heart of the South
  • during the Gilded Age
  • and Jim Crow
  • Can you see the accomplishment
  • Tuskegee was????
  • Built by the hands and sweat of the tenants..

7
3. The Voice of Women
  • a. The common belief among Americans was that
    careers and married life did not mix.
  • b. Most women who worked were single (This will
    change by the turn of the century, and many
    married women will be working).
  • c. Most single female workers were between the
    ages of 16 and 24.
  • d. Women were paid 3-5 less a week than men.

8
  • e. Many were nurses, teachers, clerical workers,
    or telephone operators.
  • f. Women also struggled to gain a voice in the
    democratic processes of America.
  • g. Susan B. Anthony
    spent over 40 years traveling
    America and
  • appearing before Congress, pushing womens
    suffrage.

9
  • i. Suffrage the right to a voice in government
  • ii. 1878- Amendment proposal The right of
    citizens of the United States to vote shall not
    be denied or abridged by the United States or by
    any state on account of sex. (It stalled for the
    2nd time and did not reappear until 1913.)

10
  • A Immigrants
  • Journey to America

11
4. Immigrants
  • a. Old Immigration vs. New Immigration
  • i. Before 1880s, most immigrants were mainly
    from northern and western Europe (old)
  • ii. After 1880s, most immigrants came from
    southern and eastern Europe (new)

12
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13
Ellis Island
  • 1.The most immigrants , about 70, had to pass
  • through the inspections at Ellis Island the
    port of entry in New York Harbor.
  • 2. Doctors would examine and question each family
    of Immigrants. If an immigrant was found to be
    ill or unfit or had a contagious disease they
    would be placed in quarantine and were often
    returned to their country of origin.
  • 3. Government inspectors administered a literacy
    test and all immigrants were to prove that they
    had at least 25.
  • 4. Ellis Island at its peak process 11,000
    immigrants a day.

14
Ellis Island, New York
  • Ellis Island the main point of entry on the East
    Coast.

15
  • Tactics such as literacy test and health
    certifications were used to stem the tide.
  • Anti-Immigration legislation was common but very
    little was passed or had an impact.

16
Immigrant being examined and and Americanized on
arrival
17
Angel Island
  • 1. While most Europeans processed through Ellis
    Island in New York most Asians entered through
    Angel Island in San Francisco bay.
  • 2. Angel Island was much more stringent in its
    questioning and examinations of Asian immigrant.
  • 3. Asian Immigrants were treated like prisoners
    and as a result riots broke out often over the
    conditions, the most serious occurring in 1919.

18
Western Point of entry
  • Angel Island in San Francisco Bay, was the main
    point of entry for Asians into the United States.

19
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20
Assimilation and conflict
  • 1. Immigrants from all regions of the world
    experienced what would be known as Cultural
    Shock or a confusion and bewilderment at a
    culture and language they did not know or
    understand.
  • 2. Immigrants tended to settle in areas of the
    cities that shared their language or cultures,
    Little Italy, Germantown, and Chinatown all
    became famous ethnic enclaves.
  • 3. Immigrants fought discrimination by creating
    social associations or benevolent societies
    through which they could borrow money, buy
    insurance, find work, etc.
  • 4. Ethnic newspapers were established as well as
    schools directed at that cultural group.

21
  • iii. By 1890, the new immigrants made up
  • 70 of the immigrants coming to the U.S.
  • iv. Nativism
  • New immigrants did not assimilate well
  • They filled jobs that many Americans
    would not take.
  • Resulted in Nativism-
  • prejudice of native-born
  • Americans against immigrants

22
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23
Assimilation and conflict
  • 1. Immigrants from all regions of the world
    experienced what would be known as Cultural
    Shock or a confusion and bewilderment at a
    culture and language they did not know or
    understand.
  • 2. Immigrants tended to settle in areas of the
    cities that shared their language or cultures,
    Little Italy, Germantown, and Chinatown all
    became famous ethnic enclaves.
  • 3. Immigrants fought discrimination by creating
    social associations or benevolent societies
    through which they could borrow money, buy
    insurance, find work, etc.
  • 4. Ethnic newspapers were established as well as
    schools directed at that cultural group.

24
Ethnic DiversityLittle Italy in New York
25
China Town in San Francisco
26
Urban Growth 1870 - 1900
  • Which city had the largest population in 1900?
  • Who do you think a lot of its residents were?
  • How did the people of that area feel about the
    newcomers?

27
  • Statue of Liberty!
  • Medical / legal inspections WHY?!?
  • Ethnic enclaves

28
  • v. Most of the immigrants ended up with
    low-paying jobs, living in terrible conditions.
    It was common for them to end up in cramped and
    overcrowded living areas known as dumbbell
    tenements

Dumbbell Tenement, NYC
29
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30
Tenement Slum Living
31
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32
Struggling Immigrant Families
33
b. Push and Pull Factors of Immigration
  • i. Pulled by the promise of the American dream.
  • ii. Pushed by famine, racial/religious/political
    discrimination, lack of opportunity in their
    homeland.

34
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35
Dumbbell Tenements
  • Most were located close to industries and air
    pollution contributed to ill health in children.
  • Jacob Riis would expose the problems of tenement
    living in the book How the other half lives.
  • High rates of crime, alcoholism, and suicide
    occurred in tenements.

36
  • HOW THE OTHER HALF LIVES READING

37
c. Chinese Exclusion Act
  • i. Passed in 1882
  • ii. Excluded all Chinese laborers for 10 years
  • iii. First immigration law passed in the U.S.
    targeted at a specific ethnic group

38
  • Pacific Chivalry, Thomas Nast, 1869

39
d. Immigration Restriction League
  • i. Founded in 1894
  • ii. Proposed a literacy test that all immigrants
    must pass in order to enter the country
  • iii. Vetoed by President Cleveland as narrow
    and un-American

40
  • A Nation of Immigrants A Cartoonist Looks at the
    Times

41
B. Social Life
  • 1. Upper-class Americans lived lavishly and got
    richer.
  • 2. Middle-class Americans moved to comfortable
    suburbs and commuted on trains to work.
  • 3. Lower-class Americans lived in city apartments
    and old neighborhoods that were dilapidated and
    overcrowded.

42
  • 4. Some urban workers moved into towns with
    housing built specifically for them (company
    towns)
  • 5. Others found apartments and tenements
    (low-cost apartments that were overcrowded)

43
  • 6. A glance at life in the city
  • a. Hundreds of people were packed into
  • places intended only for a few families.
  • b.. Due to poverty, overcrowding, and neglect,
    city neighborhoods began to decline.
  • c. Trees and grass disappeared soot
  • filled the air creating dark and foul
  • conditions in the light of day.

44
  • 7. Jane Addams page 231
  • a. Settlement house large
  • buildings in urban immigrant
  • neighborhoods that provided
  • services for neighbors
  • and sought to remedy poverty.
  • b. What was the name of the settlement
  • house founded by Jane Addams? Where
  • was it located?
  • c. What were Addams goals (What did
  • she hope to do/provide for the people she
  • was helping?)

45
  • 8. Social Gospel
  • During the late 1800s and on into the 20th
    century, people began protesting the way of life
    forced upon the financially misfortunate
    Americans.
  • One result of this was a new movement known as
    Social Gospel, which urged people to apply
    Christian principles to the countrys social
    problems.
  • Many churches began providing services such as
    job training and education.

46
  • 9. Changes in Education
  • a. As life grew more difficult for those
  • with little education, reformers pushed
  • to expand the education system.
  • b. Compulsory Education Laws required
  • students to go to school from 1870-
  • 1900, the of students in public
  • schools doubled.
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