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Explore the impact of industrial revolution and urbanization on American life, from overcrowded tenements to the rise of immigrant communities in cities like Chicago and New York. Discover the struggles and reforms that shaped urban landscapes, including the influence of political machines and the social gospel movement. Delve into the experiences of new immigrants arriving at Ellis Island and Angel Island, seeking economic opportunities and facing challenges of assimilation in the melting pot of America. Witness the resistance to immigration and the efforts to reshape American society in the midst of change.
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Changes in American Life Chapter 21 Section 1
Urbanization • Industrial revolution changed not only howpeople worked, but where. • Prior to second half of 1800’s, people mostly lived and worked in rural (country) areas. • Increasing number of factory jobs leads to urbanization(cities). • Workers migrate within US, but also from other countries
Technology • New technology helped make the construction of skyscrapers possible. • Cities began to grow vertically (upward), rather than horizontally (outward). • The elevator allowed buildings to grow taller than just a few stories, holding more people.
Home Insurance building • Chicago (1885) • 10 Stories tall
The streetcar • Travel also changed outside of buildings and in urban streets. • People originally used horses and horse-drawn carriages. • By 1900, streetcars in urban areas were carrying more than 5 billion passengers. • (Virginia first in 1888)
Changes in urban transportation Prior to 1900 Post 1900
DIFFERENCES IN LAYOUT • Chicago created elevated streetcars going above the street • New York chose to take their streetcars underground with the subway.
Urban disasters • Increased populations led to increased risk for disasters • San Francisco Earthquake (1906) - Central business district is destroyed - Almost 700 killed - $400 million in damages
Urban Poverty • Overcrowding was common due to increased population • Those who could not afford houses would rent apartments. • Tenements: run down and overcrowded apartment building.
Tenement renting • Dangerous conditions of tenements: • Older buildings • Landlord neglect • Poor designs • Little government regulation
Urban “slums” • Poor families who could not afford to live on their own would pack in with other poor families. • Inadequate garbage pick-up led to renters dumping their garbage in between buildings. • No clean water • Sewage flowed in open gutters
Urban reformers • Social Gospel: based in Christian values, aimed to improve the lives of the poor. • Most concerned with abolishing child labor. • Settlement Houses offered services • Daycare • Education • Health Care
Jane addams • Founded Chicago’s Hull House. • Fought for the passage of laws to protect female workers and outlaw child labor. • Worked to improve housing and public health.
Political machines • Organization that gains enough votes to control a local government. • “Machine” leaders would trade food or jobs for votes. • Would often gain support through doing good things such as building parks, sewers, schools, roads, and orphanages.
Tammany Hall • William “Boss” Tweed • Stole enormous amounts of money from N.Y. City
New Immigrants Chapter 21 Section 2
New Immigrants vs. old immigrants • Prior to 1890’s, most immigrants were coming from northern and western Europe. • New Immigrants: Southern and eastern European immigrants moving after 1900.
Ellis Island • First stop for immigrants coming from Europe • Processed before entering US • Had to pass a physical (anyone with serious health problems would be sent back to Europe)
ANGEL ISLAND • San Francisco holding area for Asian immigrants • Many immigrants would be held for weeks in filthy conditions
Settling in America • Many found work in American factories and cities such as: New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, and Chicago. • Immigrants would often migrate to similar communities. - Little Italy - China Town
Immigrant communities • Collected money to build places of worship • Published newspapers in native languages • Supported political machines and politicians coming from their country of origin
European Immigrant jobs • Usually took whatever jobs were available • Many worked in Northern factories for little pay ($10 a week), long hours and unsafe conditions.
Asian immigrant communities and jobs • Mostly settled in the west • Many Chinese immigrants worked on the railroad, or settled in cities where they opened restaurants • Many Japanese immigrants settled in Hawaii to work on sugar plantations
Immigrant settlement • http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2009/03/10/us/20090310-immigration-explorer.html?_r=0
“Melting pot” • Immigrants went through assimilation: the process of blending into a society. • Assimilation was a process of learning English and how to be American citizens.
Changing AMERICA • Immigrants also had an impact on American lifestyle. • Immigrant language, food, and music were adopted by American culture.
Resistance to immigration • Immigrants still faced prejudice despite their efforts to assimilate. • Protestants feared Jews and Catholic immigration, while others feared immigrants would be swept-up by political machines. • This led native-born Americans to push for restrictions on immigration.
Resistance continued… • Native-born Americans feared they would lose jobs to immigrants. • They would often take jobs for lower wages out of desperation.
Chinese Exclusion Act • Congress begins to pass laws to restrict immigration (1882). • Taxes were placed on new immigrants and bans were put on groups such as beggars and people with diseases. • In 1882, Congress passed the Chinese Exclusion Act, banning Chinese immigration for 10 years.