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Politics in the Gilded Age

Politics in the Gilded Age. Local Urban problems such as crime and poor sanitation led people to give control of local governments to political machines, or organizations of professional politicians.

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Politics in the Gilded Age

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  1. Politics in the Gilded Age

  2. Local Urban problems such as crime and poor sanitation led people to give control of local governments to political machines, or organizations of professional politicians. Machine bosses were often corrupt, asking for votes in exchange for jobs and housing, taking bribes, and using fraud to win elections. Political Corruption

  3. Political Reform • Republican choose a reform minded politician to run for President in 1880 • James A. Garfield • But…he’s murdered 4 months into his term

  4. Political Reform • Chester Arthur followed him • Arthur supported government reforms

  5. Political Reform • He helped to pass the Pendleton Service Act • Required that promotions be based on merit, not political connections

  6. Election of 1896 • William Mckinley (R) Vs • William Jennings Bryan (D)

  7. Election of 1896 • McKinley wins • Supported by urban workers and the middle class • Bryan loses • Supported by those that wanted a larger money supply (mostly poor farmers)

  8. McKinley • Oversaw a tariff bill and a stronger gold standard • Enabled him an easy victory over Bryan in the 1900 election • The economy improved a great deal under McKinley’s watch

  9. Bad news for McKinley • McKinley assassinated in 1901 • Buffalo, NY • By Leon Czolgosz • A mentally ill anarchist

  10. Immigration Late 19th to the Early 20th Centuries

  11. The New Immigrants • Between 1800 and 1880, more than ten million immigrants came to the U.S., mostly from northern and western Europe. • By 1910 nearly one out of every seven Americans was foreign-born.

  12. Near the turn of the twentieth century, a diverse new wave of millions of immigrants from southern and eastern Europe and Asia came to the U.S. and built tight-knit communities. Immigration

  13. Because of severe immigration laws, smaller numbers came from East Asia Immigration

  14. All came for a better life Jews fled eastern Europe to escape religious persecution. Southern and eastern Europeans fled severe poverty. In 1892 the government opened an immigration station at Ellis Island in New York Harbor. Over the years, some 12 million people passed through Ellis Island. Coming to America

  15. After 1910, Asians passed through Angel Island in San Francisco Bay, but many were held like prisoners for weeks. Coming to America

  16. Immigrants faced crowding and low pay, but settled near others from their country and started communities and organizations to help themselves. Some native-born Americans, known as nativists, saw immigrants as a threat to their jobs and safe communities. Prejudice Against Immigrants

  17. On the West Coast, prejudice was directed against Asians; Chinese immigrants were restricted from jobs and neighborhoods, and immigration was halted by Congress through the Chinese Exclusion Act. Prejudice Against Immigrants

  18. What do the shadow figures look like? • Was the artist a nativist? How do you know?

  19. Architects used steel frames and elevators to build tall buildings in cities. New urban planning specialists redesigned cities and built parks. • Settlement houses helped immigrants overcome poverty. Reformers who believed in social gospel, or expressing faith through good works, volunteered in the settlement houses. • Lifestyles varied dramatically for those of varied social status. • Working Class • Poor, paid low wages, faced housing shortages, lived in filthy, crowded tenements. • Wealthy • Made their money in industry and business • Built castle-like homes in places such as New York’s stylish Fifth Avenue • Middle Class • Made up of corporate employees and professionals Urban Life in America

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