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Chapter 14

Chapter 14. Immigration and Urbanization. 1. The New Immigrants. Early immigrants had been primarily protestant (Germany); Catholics from Ireland learned to speak English and assimilated; many settled on farms

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Chapter 14

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  1. Chapter 14 Immigration and Urbanization

  2. 1. The New Immigrants • Early immigrants had been primarily protestant (Germany); Catholics from Ireland learned to speak English and assimilated; many settled on farms • “New Immigrants” – 1870’s from southern and eastern Europe (Italy, Greece, Poland, Russia, Hungary) in massive numbers • Unskilled, Catholic, Jewish, poor, settled in cities • New cultures and languages

  3. Immigrant Experience • Long journey, could only take essentials, tickets were expensive • Most traveled steerage (worst accommodations – lower decks, not private) • Filthy, disease, crowded • Processing in American ports • Requirements: Healthy, money ($20), skill • After 1892 – Ellis Island, NY • Wealthier passengers processed on board • Chinese processed at Angel Island, San Francisco • Had to prove they had relatives; often held for weeks

  4. http://www.history.com/videos/ellis-island-registering-as-an-american-citizenhttp://www.history.com/videos/ellis-island-registering-as-an-american-citizen

  5. http://www.history.com/videos/immigrants-detained-at-ellis-islandhttp://www.history.com/videos/immigrants-detained-at-ellis-island

  6. http://www.history.com/videos/passing-the-medical-inspection-at-ellis-islandhttp://www.history.com/videos/passing-the-medical-inspection-at-ellis-island

  7. http://www.history.com/videos/immigrants-reunited-with-loved-oneshttp://www.history.com/videos/immigrants-reunited-with-loved-ones

  8. http://www.history.com/videos/ellis-islands-dark-underbelly-in-pictureshttp://www.history.com/videos/ellis-islands-dark-underbelly-in-pictures

  9. Immigrant Experience cont. • New language, new culture • Those without family had a difficult time • Had to decide where to live and what to do • Lived in ethnic neighborhoods together • Exclusionary but also felt familiar • Americanization programs – helped them learn language, adapt to U.S. way of life • “Melting Pot” theory • Children generally assimilated better than first generation and felt more “American” • Older generation clung to religion, heritage, families

  10. Immigrant Experience • Hostility due to competition for jobs • Nativism – native-born were superior • Religion – major source of hostility • Chinese Exclusion Act – restricted numbers • Exclusions for those who were immoral, criminals, paupers • BUT – fueled industrial growth, made their traditions part of America, provided massive labor supply, helped U.S. become a world power

  11. Chinatown

  12. 2. Cities Expand and Change • Urbanization • Advantages • Many opportunities, products, services, education, jobs • Disadvantages • Tenements (low cost family housing), slums, no heat/air, poor sanitation, no water, sewage, fires, crime , conflict (gangs) • Jacob Riis: How the Other Half Lives • http://www.history.com/shows/america-the-story-of-us/videos/jacob-riis

  13. Improvements in the Cities • Skyscrapers made of steel • Safety elevator that wouldn’t fall if the rope broke (Elisha Otis) • Electricity powers mass transit – trains, commuter rails, cable cars, underground railways (subways) in Boston and NY • City Planners control growth • Architectural standards, parks and recreation areas reserved

  14. 3. Social and Cultural Trends • Gilded Age – era of wealth, new products, markets, growing middle class, shopping, sports • Consumerism expands greatly • Advertising attracts customers • “Department” stores emerge (Macy’s, Marshall Field, Jordan Marsh) • Mail order catalogs (Sears) • Overall higher standard of living • Began to get indoor plumbing, appliances, pre-packaged food

  15. Mass Culture • Consumption patterns became similar – clothing styles, gadgets, food preferences – mass culture • Widespread newspaper circulation • Joseph Pulitzer – sensational stories of corruption, politics, sports – designed to sell papers • William Randolph Hearst – competed with Pulitzer, papers became even more sensationalized • Literature – Mark Twain, Horatio Alger (succeed by hard work), Stephen Crane

  16. Mass Culture cont. • Education – growth of public schools, kindergartens, literacy rate climbed, some women’s colleges • Entertainment – amusement parks (Coney island) and first roller coasters, parks for city laborers (Central Park) • Outdoor events – Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show, Annie Oakley – riding, roping, rodeos • Vaudeville – medley of drama, songs, off-color comedy • Movie theatres – The Great Train Robbery – first movie, nickelodeons – charged one nickel!

  17. Mass Culture cont. • Expos and exhibitions • Sports drew thousands, especially baseball (Fenway Park); baseball organizes into a business (NL), “Coloured League” • Horse racing, bicycle racing, boxing, football, basketball invented by George Naismith • Sports heroes emerged

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