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America Moves to the City

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Title: America Moves to the City


1
America Moves to the City
  • 1865-1900

2
The Urban Frontier
  • 1870-1900
  • U.S. population doubled
  • City populations tripled
  • Architects such as Louis Sullivan perfected
    skyscrapers
  • First appeared in Chicago in 1885.
  • Electricity, indoor plumbing, and telephones made
    city life more alluring.

3
Home Insurance Building, Chicago
4
Carnegie Library (1904-1905)
5
Harry S. Renkert House (1908)
6
Stark County Courthouse (1892)
7
Historic Ridgewood Home
8
Historic Ridgewood Home
9
Sears-Roebuck HomesThe Magnolia5000-6000 in
1900
Historic Ridgewood
Catalog Picture
10
Reactions to the Problems
  • The Social Gospel was preached throughout the
    country.
  • Walter Rauschenbusch

11
Families and Women in Urban Society
  • In 1898, Charlotte Perkins Gilman published Women
    and Economics, a classic of feminist literature,
    in which she called for women to abandon their
    dependent status and contribute to the larger
    life of the community through productive
    involvement in the economy.
  • She also advocated day-care centers and
    centralized nurseries and kitchens.
  • Divorce rates increased to 1 in 12 marriages by
    1900
  • Reduction in family size due to shift from rural
    to urban
  • Womens suffrage movement continued
  • Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony
    helped found the National American Womens
    Suffrage Association
  • Wyoming was the first to grant suffrage in 1869
  • By 1900, some states allowed women to vote
    locally and most allowed women to own and control
    property after marriage.
  • Ida B. Wells rallied toward better treatment for
    Blacks as well and formed the National
    Association of Colored Women in 1896.

12
Temperance and morality
  • Women especially convinced that excessive
    drinking caused many of societys problems.
  • Womens Christian Temperance Union formed in
    1874.
  • Anti-Saloon League persuaded 21 states to close
    down saloons and bars.
  • Carrie Nation raided saloons and smashed barrels
    of beer with a hatchet
  • Society for the Suppression of Vice helped to
    pass the Comstock Law which prevented the mailing
    or transportation of obscene and lewd material
    (1873).
  • The American Society for the Prevention of
    Cruelty to Animals was formed in 1866 to
    discourage the mistreatment of livestock, and the
    American Red Cross, formed by Clara Barton, a
    Civil War nurse, was formed in 1881.

13
Carrie Nation
14
Churches Confront the Urban Challenge
  • Dwight Lyman Moody
  • Proclaimed the gospel of kindness and forgiveness
    and adapted the old-time religion to the facts of
    city life.
  • The Moody Bible Institute was founded in Chicago
    in 1889 and continued working well after his 1899
    death.
  • Roman Catholic and Jewish faiths were also
    gaining much by the new immigration.
  • Cardinal Gibbons was popular with Roman Catholics
    and Protestants, as he preached American unity.
  • By 1890, Americans could choose from 150
    religions.
  • Salvation Army
  • The Church of Christ, Scientist (Christian
    Science), founded by Mary Baker Eddy, preached
    that Christianity heals sickness.
  • YMCAs and YWCAs

15
Immigration
  • High rates of immigration between 1880-1920
  • In many northern cities more than half of the
    population were immigrants or 1st generation
    Americans
  • Few immigrants from Latin America before 1810
  • Old immigrants
  • Northwestern Europe (Britain, Scandinavia,
    Germany)
  • Racially fit, culturally sophisticated,
    politically mature
  • New immigrants
  • From Eastern and Southern Europe
  • Seen as racially inferior, culturally
    impoverished, incapable of assimilating American
    values and traditions

16
Immigrants and Their Children as a Percentage of
the Population of Selected Cities, 1920
17
Sources of Immigration
18
Causes of Immigration
  • Religious or political persecution
  • Main reason economic hardship
  • European population expanded faster than lands
    there could support their people
  • Rural ways of life in Europe were threatened by
    industrialization and urbanization
  • European village artisans unable to compete with
    mass-produced goods
  • Commercial agriculture and competition from
    American grain exports force peasants off land

19
Patterns of immigration
  • Need for a contact in America (family member,
    former neighbor)
  • Temporary residency was sought by many immigrants
  • Many Jews came as families, intending to stay in
    the U.S., rather than return to religious
    persecution
  • Immigration moved in tandem with U.S. business
    cycles

20
Chinese and Japanese Immigration
  • Chinese and Japanese immigrants contributed
    greatly to 2 important western economic sectors
    railroads and agriculture
  • Chinese Exclusion Act (1882)
  • Japanese immigration banned in 1907
  • 1790 Naturalization Act interpreted to preclude
    citizenship for East Asian immigrants
  • Motive for immigration similar to European
  • Angel Island San Francisco

21
Immigrant Labor
  • Immigrants did arduous work in most major
    industries
  • Triangle Shirtwaist Company (1911)
  • Problems for workers
  • Chronic fatigue and malnourishment
  • 60 work week average
  • Average yearly income 400-500
  • Immigrants most vulnerable during Depression

22
Living Conditions
  • Many families lived in crowded, dilapidated 2 or
    3 room apartments
  • Tenements
  • Lower East Side of NYC
  • Crowded
  • Lack of windows, ventilation
  • Poor sanitary conditions
  • High rates of deadly infectious diseases
    (Typhoid, Diptheria, Pneumonia)
  • By 1900 some cities make improvements
  • Housing inspections
  • Sewer systems

23
The Settlement House
  • Jane Addams founded Hull House in 1889
  • Won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1931
  • Lillian Walds Henry Street Settlement opened its
    doors in NYC (1893)
  • Settlement houses became centers for womens
    activism and reform
  • Florence Kelley fought for protection of women
    workers and against child labor.

24
Darwin Disrupts the Churches
  • Charles Darwin published his On the Origin of
    Species, which set forth the new doctrine of
    evolutionism and attracted the ire and fury of
    fundamentalists.
  • Modernists took a step from the fundamentalists
    and refused to believe that the Bible was
    completely accurate and factual.

25
The Lust for Learning
  • Creation of more public schools and the provision
    of free textbooks funded by taxpayers.
  • Catholic schools also grew in popularity and in
    number.
  • Chautauqua movement (1874)
  • included public lectures to many people by famous
    writers and extensive at-home studies
  • Americans began to develop a faith in formal
    education as a solution to poverty.

26
Booker T. Washington and Education for African
Americans
  • headed a black normal and industrial school in
    Tuskegee, Alabama
  • avoided the issue of social equality
  • African Americans would gain rights through
    education

27
W.E.B. DuBois
  • first African American to get a Ph.D. from
    Harvard University
  • demanded immediate equality for African Americans
  • founded the National Association for the
    Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) in 1910.
  • Many of DuBoiss differences with Washington
    reflected the contrasting life experiences of
    southern and northern Blacks.

28
The Hallowed Halls of Ivy
  • Colleges for women, such as Vassar, were gaining
    ground.
  • Howard University in Washington D.C., Atlanta
    University, and Hampton Institute in Virginia
    were established for African Americans.
  • The Morrill Act of 1862
  • land grant bill to fund colleges in each state

29
The March of the Mind
  • Medical schools and science were prospering after
    the Civil War.
  • Discoveries by Louis Pasteur and Joseph Lister
    improved medical science and health.
  • William James helped establish the discipline of
    behavioral psychology.

Louis Pasteur
30
The Appeal of the Press
  • Libraries such as the Library of Congress also
    opened across America, bringing literature into
    peoples homes.
  • Invention of the Linotype in 1885
  • Competition sparked yellow journalism, in which
    newspapers reported on wild and fantastic stories
    that often were false or quite exaggerated sex,
    scandal, and other human-interest stories.
  • Two new journalistic tycoons emerged Joseph
    Pulitzer (New York World) and William Randolph
    Hearst (San Francisco Examiner, et al.).
  • The Associated Press, established in the 1840s,
    helped to offset some of the bad journalism.

31
Apostles of Reform
  • Henry George wrote Progress and Poverty
  • It was he who came up with the idea of the
    graduated income tax.
  • Edward Bellamy published Looking Backward (1888)
  • criticized the social injustices of the day and
    pictured a utopian government that had
    nationalized big business to serve the public
    good

32
Postwar Writing
  • Dime-novels depicted the wild West and other
    romantic adventure settings.
  • General Lewis Wallace wrote Ben Hur A Tale of
    the Christ, which combated the ideas and beliefs
    of Darwinism and Darwinists.
  • Horatio Alger books told that virtue, honesty,
    and industry were rewarded by success, wealth,
    and honor
  • Walt Whitman was one of the old writers who still
    remained active, publishing revisions of his
    hardy perennial Leaves of Grass.
  • Emily Dickinson was a famed hermit of a poet
    whose poems were published after her death.

33
Literary Landmarks
  • Kate Chopin wrote about adultery, suicide, and
    womens ambitions in The Awakening.
  • Mark Twain (Samuel Clemens) wrote many books,
    including The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, The
    Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (controversial due
    to its language and subjects), The Gilded Age
    (hence the term given to the era of corruption
    after the Civil War).
  • William Dean Howells became editor in chief of
    the Atlantic Monthly and wrote about ordinary
    people and sometimes-controversial social themes.
  • Stephen Crane wrote about the seamy underside of
    life in urban, industrial America (prostitutes,
    etc...) in such books like Maggie Girl of the
    Street.
  • He also wrote The Red Bad of Courage, a tale
    about a Civil War soldier.
  • Henry James wrote Daisy Miller and Portrait of a
    Lady, often making women his central characters
    in his novels and exploring their personalities.
  • Jack London wrote about the wild unexplored
    regions of wilderness in The Call of the Wild and
    The Iron Heel.
  • Frank Norriss The Octopus exposed the corruption
    of the railroads.
  • Paul Laurence Dunbar and Charles W. Chesnutt, two
    Black writers, used Black dialect and folklore in
    their poems and stores, respectively.

34
The New Morality
  • Victoria Woodhull proclaimed free love, and
    together with her sister, Tennessee Claflin, she
    wrote Woodhull and Claflins Weekly, which
    shocked readers with exposés of affairs, etc
  • The new morality reflected sexual freedom in
    the increase of birth control, divorces, and
    frank discussion of sexual topics.

35
Artistic Triumphs
  • James Whistler and John Singer Sargent went to
    Europe to learn art.
  • Mary Cassatt painted sensitive portraits of women
    and children.
  • George Inness became Americas leading
    landscapist.
  • Winslow Homer was the most famous realist.
  • Music reached new heights with the erection of
    opera houses and the emergence of jazz.
  • Thomas Edison invented the phonograph, which
    allowed the reproduction of sounds that could be
    heard by listeners.
  • Henry H. Richardson was another fine architect
    whose Richardsonian architecture was famed
    around the country.
  • The Columbian Exposition in 1893 displayed many
    architectural triumphs.

36
The Lackawanna Valleyby George Inness
37
Whistlers Mother (1871)by James Whistler
38
John Singer Sargent
39
Mary Cassatt
40
Winslow Homer
41
Richardsonian Romanesque Five Oaks, Massillon
(1892-1894)
42
Richardsonian Romanesque The Case Mansion
(Market Street)
43
The Business of Amusement
  • Phineas T. Barnum and James A. Bailey teamed in
    1881 to stage the Greatest Show on Earth (now
    the Ringling Bros. and Barnum and Bailey Circus).
  • Wild West shows, like those of Buffalo Bill
    Cody (and the markswoman Annie Oakley) were
    ever-popular, and baseball and football became
    popular as well.
  • Wrestling gained popularity and respectability.
  • In 1891, James Naismith invented basketball.
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