1 / 40

The Age of the City

The Age of the City. 1870 - 1910. Introduction. Industrialization & commercialization changed Am. society Growing size & influence of cities. Introduction. Society can improve itself Growth & progress could not continue to grow recklessly Federal government must intervene.

mkoch
Download Presentation

The Age of the City

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Age of the City 1870 - 1910

  2. Introduction • Industrialization & commercialization changed Am. society • Growing size & influence of cities

  3. Introduction • Society can improve itself • Growth & progress could not continue to grow recklessly • Federal government must intervene

  4. The New Urban Growth • Urban population increased sevenfold after the Civil War • Urban families • High infant mortality rate • Declining fertility rate • High death rate from disease

  5. The Ethnic City • In 1890, majority of urban population was immigrant • Diversity of new immigrant population • Ethnic neighborhoods • Advantages? • Disadvantages?

  6. The Urban Landscape • A place of contrasts • Growth helped w/technology & industrial developments • Misgovernment • Poverty • Filth • Epidemics • Fires • Congestion

  7. The Urban Landscape, cont. • Housing • Most urban residents rented • High population density • Tenements (slum dwelling) • Windowless rooms • Little or no heating or plumbing

  8. The Urban Landscape, cont. • Jacob Riis How the Other Half Lives (1890)

  9. The Urban Landscape, cont. • Transportation challenges • Mass transportation • Elevated railways • Cable cars • Electric trolley • Subways • Brooklyn Bridge • Skyscrapers

  10. Strains of Urban Life • Congestion • Absence of public services • Fire • Chicago & Boston (1871) • San Francisco & earthquake (1906) • Created professional fire departments

  11. Strains of Urban Life, cont. • Disease • Inadequate sanitation facilities • Improper sewage disposal • Water contamination

  12. Strains of Urban Life, cont. • Poverty • Overcrowding • Crime • Violence • Creation of professional police departments • Theodore Dreiser’s Sister Carrie (1900)

  13. The Settlement House Movement • Jane Addams & Hull House (1889) • Staffed by educated, middle class • Immigrant neighborhoods • Social work

  14. The Machine and the Boss • Institutions to help immigrants adjust to Am. urban life • Political “machine” & urban bosses • Win votes for organization • Rewarding followers w/patronage • Graft & corruption • William “Boss” M. Tweed of NYC’s Tammany Hall • Modernized city infrastructures • Provided stability & expanded role of govt. • Some expressed public outrage at corruption

  15. Society and Culture in Urbanizing America • Distinct middle class culture emerged & exerted power in lt. 19th cent. • Rise of consumer culture

  16. The Rise of Mass Consumption • Expansion of markets for goods produced • Incomes rising but at uneven rates • Middle class – clerks, accountants, middle managers, doctors, lawyers

  17. The Rise of Mass Consumption, cont. • Development of affordable products • New merchandising techniques • Ready-made clothing • Food • Tin cans (1880s) • Refrigerated rail cars • Improved diets & better health

  18. The Rise of Mass Consumption, cont. • “Chain stores” • A & P (groceries) • Woolworth’s (dry goods) • Sears & Roebuck (mail-order) • Department stores • Marshall Field in Chicago

  19. The Rise of Mass Consumption, cont. • Rise of mass consumption had dramatic effects on women • Food preparation • Employment • Consumer protection mvmt. • Florence Kelley

  20. Leisure and Sport • Growing interest in leisure time • Rise of organized spectator sports • Baseball & 1903 World Series • Football • Basketball

  21. Leisure and Sport, cont. • Women and golf • Tennis • Bicycling

  22. Leisure and Popular Culture • Ethnic communities & theaters • Musical comedy • Vaudeville (1 of few entertainment media open to black performers)

  23. Leisure and Popular Culture, cont. • Movies • D.W. Griffith & Birthof a Nation (1915)

  24. Leisure and Popular Culture, cont. • Entertainment and public quality • Coney Island in NY • Central Park

  25. Leisure and Popular Culture, cont. • Reading novels & poetry • Dime novels

  26. Mass Communications • Market for news & information • Daily newspapers increased ninefold • Professionalized & big business • Hearst • Pulitzer • “Yellow journalism”

  27. Muckrakers & Social Gospel • Reform minded journalists • Social, economic, & political injustices • Exposing scandal and corruption • Targeted trusts

  28. Muckrakers & Social Gospel • Reform minded journalists • Social, economic, & political injustices • Exposing scandal and corruption • Targeted trusts

  29. The Muckrakers and the Social Gospel, cont. • Ida Tarbell & Standard Oil • Child labor • Railroads • Immigrant ghettoes • Labor unions • Governments

  30. The Literature of Urban America • Mark Twain & Huckleberry Finn & Tom Sawyer • Stephen Crane & Maggie: A Girl of the Streets • Dreiser • Upton Sinclair & The Jungle

  31. Art in the Age of the City • New styles independent of Europe • Winslow Homer & maritime life • James McNeil Whistler & oriental themes • George Bellows (Ashcan School of Art) • Edward Hopper

  32. Cliff Dwellers by George Bellows

  33. Automat by Edward Hopper

  34. Toward Universal Schooling • High demand for education • Rapid expansion & reform for schools & universities • Spread of free public primary & secondary education

  35. Toward Universal Schooling, cont. • Opportunities for Indian tribes • Carlisle Indian Industrial School in PA • Morrill Land Grant Act • Philanthropists • Women • Mount Holyoke, Vassar, Wellesley, Smith, Bryn Mawr

More Related