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Chapter 5

Chapter 5. Immigration and Urbanization. Daily Question. Why did immigrants come to the United States, and what impact did they have upon society?. Chapter 5 section 1. Objectives Compare the “new immigration” of the late 1800s to earlier immigration.

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Chapter 5

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  1. Chapter 5 Immigration and Urbanization

  2. Daily Question • Why did immigrants come to the United States, and what impact did they have upon society?

  3. Chapter 5 section 1 • Objectives • Compare the “new immigration” of the late 1800s to earlier immigration. • Explain the push and pull factors leading immigrants to America. • Describe the challenges that immigrants faced in traveling to America. • Analyze how immigrants adapted to American life while trying to maintain familiar cultural practices.

  4. Did You Know? It is estimated that the ancestors of almost one-half of all the people living in the United States today passed through Ellis Island as immigrants. Today Ellis Island is open to the public. It contains the Ellis Island Immigration Museum.

  5. By 1900, eastern and southern Europeans made up more than half of all immigrants. Of the 14 million immigrants who arrived between 1860 and 1900, many were European Jews. • America offered immigrants employment, few immigration restrictions, avoidance of military service, religious freedom, and the chance to move up the social ladder.

  6. The foreign-born population of the U.S. nearly doubled between 1870 and 1900. • In the 1840s and 1950s, German and Irish Catholics had immigrated to the United States. • Despite differences, their children were often able to blend into American society. • But starting in 1870, some people feared ”new” immigrants would destroy American culture.

  7. Immigrants to the United States from Southern and Eastern Europe made up 70 percent of all immigrants after 1900, up from 1 percent at midcentury.

  8. Push factors for immigration are those that push people from their homes, while pull factors are those that attract them to a new place.

  9. The Long Journey Most immigrants took the difficult trip to America in steerage, the least expensive accommodations on a steamship.

  10. Coming to America was often a tough decision. Immigrants usually brought only what they could carry. • Located on the lowest decks with no private cabins, steerage was crowded and dirty. • Illness usually spread quickly in the cramped quarters and some immigrants died during the passage.

  11. The 14-day trip usually ended at Ellis Island, a small island in New York Harbor. It served as a processing center for most immigrants arriving on the East Coast after 1892. • Most immigrants passed through Ellis Island in a day. However, some faced the possibility of being separated from family and possibly sent back to Europe due to health problems.

  12. There, officers conducted legal and medical inspections. Only 2 percent were denied entry into the U.S. • Severe unemployment, poverty, and famine in China; the discovery of gold in California; the Taiping Rebellion in China; and the demand for railroad workers in the United States led to an increase in Chinese immigration to the United States in the mid-1800s.

  13. Asian Immigration to America • In Western cities, Chinese immigrants worked as laborers, servants, skilled tradesmen, and merchants. Some opened their own laundries. • Between 1900 and 1908, Japanese immigration to the United States drastically increased as Japan began to build an industrial economy and an empire.

  14. In 1910 a barracks was opened on Angel Island in California. Here, Asian immigrants, mostly young men and boys, waited sometimes for months for the results of immigration hearings.

  15. Challenges in America • Most immigrants settled in cities. They lived in neighborhoods called ghettoes, that were separated into ethnic groups. • Here they duplicated many of the comforts of their homelands, including language and religion. • Large cities such as New York and Chicago had huge immigrant populations by 1890.

  16. Immigrants who learned English, adapted to American culture, had marketable skills or money, or if they settled among members of their own ethnic group tended to adjust well to living in the United States.

  17. Immigrants had some help coping with their new surroundings. • Settlement houses ran Americanization programs to help recent immigrants learn English and adopt American dress and diet. • Immigrants formed fraternal associations – based on ethnic or religious identity – which provided social services and financial assistance.

  18. Daily question • Where did many Chinese immigrants settle?

  19. Many believed that American society was a “melting pot” where white people of different nationalities blended to create a single culture. This model excluded Asian immigrants, who became targets of social and legal discrimination.

  20. What helped immigrants adjust to living in the United States? • (Immigrants tended to adjust well to living in the United States if they quickly learned English and adapted to the American culture. Skilled immigrants, those who had money, or those who lived among their own ethnic group also tended to adjust more successfully.)

  21. Religious differences andcompetition for jobs and housing led to divisions and prejudices.

  22. The Resurgence of Nativism • The increase in immigration led to nativism, a preference for native-born people and the desire to limit immigration. Earlier, in the 1840s and 1850s, nativism was directed towards the Irish. In the early 1900s, it was the Asian, Jews, and eastern Europeans that were the focus of nativism.

  23. Nativism led to the forming of two anti-immigrant groups. The American Protective Association was founded in 1887. The party's founder, Henry Bowers, disliked Catholicism. He wanted to stop Catholic immigration. In the 1870s, Denis Kearny, an Irish immigrant, organized the Workingman's Party of California. This group wanted to stop Chinese immigration. Racial violence resulted.

  24. In 1882, Congress started to restrict immigration to the United States. • In 1882 Congress passed the Chinese Exclusion Act that barred Chinese immigration for 10 years and prevented the Chinese already in America from becoming citizens. This act was renewed by Congress in 1892, made permanent in 1902, and not repealed until 1943.

  25. Congress passed another law that prohibited the immigration of anyone who was a criminal, immoral, a pauper, or likely to need public assistance.

  26. Why did nativists oppose eastern European immigrants? • (Nativists thought the large influx of Catholic immigrants from Ireland would give the Catholic Church too much power in the American government. Labor unions feared that immigrants would work for lower wages and take work as strikebreakers.)

  27. Immigrants transformed American society. • They fueled industrial growth. • They helped build the railroads and worked in factories, mills, and mines. • Their traditions became part of American culture. • Increasingly, they became active in labor unions and politics, and they demanded reforms.

  28. 5 Section 2 Objectives: • 1. Explain the technological developments that made the growth of cities possible. • 2. Evaluate the role that political machines played in urban politics in the late 1800s.

  29. Did You Know? The first subway in the United States was built in Boston in 1897. It was 11/2 miles long. Today subways are used in Boston, New York City, Chicago, Atlanta, Baltimore, Philadelphia, San Francisco, and Washington, D.C. The subway that travels from New Jersey to New York City travels beneath two rivers into Long Island.

  30. City dwellers faced the noise, dirt, and crime of the cities, the hardships of factory work, and the overcrowded, dangerous conditions of tenements. • Governments and city planners tried to alleviate dangerous conditions and make cities better, safer places to live.

  31. In 1860, most Americans lived in rural areas, with only 16 percent living in towns or cities with a population of at least 8,000. • The urban population of the United States grew from about 10 million in 1870 to over 30 million by 1900.

  32. By 1900, 32 percent – or 15 million Americans – lived in cities with populations of more than 50,000. This period was the beginning of an upsurge in American urbanization that brought changes to the country.

  33. America’s major cities were manufacturing and transportation centers connected by railway lines. The cities were clustered in the Northeast, on the Pacific Coast, and along the waterways of the Midwest.

  34. Farmers began moving to cities because of better paying jobs, electricity, running water, plumbing, and entertainment. • Life was hard in the cities, but most people preferred them to the country.

  35. Immigrants remained in the cities, where they worked long hours for little pay. Still, most immigrants felt their standard of living had improved in the United States.

  36. Workers’ children could attend city schools. • Churches, theaters, social clubs, and museums offered companionship and entertainment. • Most city workers were able to enjoy a higher standard of living, and some moved into the growing middle class.

  37. Housing and transportation needs changed due to the increase in the amount of people living in cities. • As the price of land increased, building owners began to build up. Skyscrapers, tall steel frame buildings, were constructed for this reason. Chicagoan Louis Sullivan contributed to the design of skyscrapers.

  38. In the late 1800s, various kinds of mass transit developed to move large numbers of people around cities quickly. • Beginning with the horse car, and later to the more sophisticated electric trolley cars and elevated railroads, engineers created ways to move the ever-expanding population around the city.

  39. Traffic congestion often kept streetcars from running on schedule. In 1897, Boston solved this problem by building the nation’s first subway system, and New York City followed suit in 1904. Mass transit made it possible for middle- and upper-class people to move to the suburbs.

  40. Cities set aside space for heavy industry, financial institutions, homes, and public spaces such as libraries and government buildings. As cities grew, planners began to use zoning to designate certain parts of the city for certain functions. But parks were also important in cities, and Frederick Law Olmsted designed many well-known ones, such as New York City’s Central Park.

  41. Separation by Class (page 343) • Definite boundaries could be seen between where the wealthy, middle class, and working class people lived. • Wealthy families lived in the heart of the city where they constructed elaborate homes.

  42. The middle class, which included doctors, lawyers, engineers, and teachers, tended to live away from the city. • The majority of urban dwellers were part of the working class who lived in city tenements, or dark and crowded multi-family apartments.

  43. Many neighborhoods became overcrowded. Tenements usually were unhealthy and dangerous because they had few windows and little sanitation.

  44. Urban Problems • The growth of cities resulted in an increase in crime, fire, disease, and pollution. From 1880 to 1900, there was a large increase in the murder rate. • Native-born Americans blamed immigrants for the increase in crime.

  45. Alcohol contributed to crime in the late 1800s.(leads to Prohibition) • Contaminated drinking water from improper sewage disposal resulted in epidemics of typhoid fever and cholera.

  46. Cities responded to the threats of fire and crimewith professional fire fightingteams, uniformed city policeforces, and new electric streetlights. However, the police were unable to overcome the challenge of conflicts between different racial groups, classes, and neighborhoods.

  47. At this time, cities had filthy, unpaved streets and sanitation problems, conditions perfect for breeding epidemics. • To solve these problems, governments and city planners tried to regulate housing, sanitation, sewers, and public health. • They began to take water from clean reservoirs and to use water filtration systems.

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