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Life at the Turn of the Century

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Title: Life at the Turn of the Century


1
Life at the Turn of the Century
  • Chapter 15 pages 305- 326
  • Texas History

2
I. The Galveston Storm of 1900
  • September 8- hurricane hits unexpectedly
  • Winds- 120 mph, tidal wave sweeps over island
  • 6,000 killed
  • City in ruins, thousands homeless
  • City rebuilds with a sea wall, raise city and
    average of 8 feet
  • See Isaacs Storm on DVD 25.00

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II. Living and Working in Texas
  • 90 live in rural areas, 6 of ten working in
    agriculture
  • Work from daylight to dusk
  • Town work centers around father, young people
    could find summer jobs
  • Living conditions still without electricity,
    cities did have telephone and telegraph
  • Travel- roads still slow, but improving
  • Cars and planes begin to come into picture

8
III. Urban Texas
  • 17 live in cities- 11 have more than 10,000
  • San Antonio the larges
  • Modern transportation will help cities grow-
    market centers- railroad
  • Industrial development- oil helps spur this

9
IV. Oil and Industrialization
  • Jan. 10, 1901- major oil find- Spindletop- near
    Beaumont
  • Natural gas- helps with power supply
  • Refineries develop
  • Oil companies- Gulf, Texaco, Humble (Exxon)
  • Lumber becomes important

10
V. Leisure Activities
  • Church socials, cotton gin, sewing circles,
    dancing (churches oppose it)
  • Holidays- July 4th, Juneteenth- June 19th-
    African Americans, Cinco de Mayo and Diaz y Seis-
    Mexican Americans, Christmas- family
  • Sports- horse racing, baseball, football, Jack
    Johnson- 1st American black heavyweight boxing
    champion of the world
  • Music, theaters, Circus, motion pictures- short
    and expensive

11
VI. Public Health
  • Cholera, typhoid, diphtheria, some smallpox,
    yellow fever
  • Childrens diseases- measles, mumps, chicken pox
  • Few doctors- large towns mainly, more medical
    schools started
  • Nurses also trained
  • Women still had to treat variety of illnesses and
    act as midwives
  • Minorities had few doctors-
  • Lots of home remedies-

12
VII. Religion
  • Baptists- largest church- 33
  • Methodists- 27
  • Catholics- about 25
  • Jewish- 15,000
  • Black churches- mainly Baptist or Methodist
  • Involved with Prohibition, horse racing and
    dancing also attacked
  • Germans and Catholics against prohibition

13
VIII. Education
  • Law of 1884- put counties in charge of education,
    money was tight
  • Urban schools longer year- 162 v. 98 in rural
    areas
  • 1900s- Texas begins to see importance of
    educational system- still lags behind country
  • AM- 1876, Prairie View AM- 1901
  • 1881- University of Texas (opens in 1883)

14
IX. Women at the Turn of the Century
  • Still could not vote, limited in business
    operations
  • Could own land, make contracts, sue
  • Property still under management of husband
  • Limited educational opportunities
  • Texas Women's University- 1903
  • Voting and temperance, reform movements, child
    labor
  • Minority women organized clubs too

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X. Race and Ethnicity
  • Minorities- 25
  • Immigrants flow in from Europe
  • Blacks- 80 on farms- mostly sharecroppers- very
    poor, urban blacks- laborers- low wages
  • Could not join unions
  • Small businesses
  • Segregated schools- little chance for good
    education
  • Law did not protect blacks
  • Some progress- NAACP- 1912

17
  • Mexican Americans-mostly South Texas- faced
    poverty, prejudice and discrimination
  • Language a barrier, used inventive ways to cope
  • Local politics in South Texas
  • Some success in correct abuses by protesting
  • Europeans- easier to fit into society
  • Jewish immigrants settle in larger cities- opened
    up businesses and stores

18
XI. Literature and Arts
  • Looked to past for stories- the Alamo, rangers,
    bandits
  • H.A. McArdle- Dawn of the Alamo
  • Elisabeth Ney- statues of Austin, Houston
  • Scott Joplin- ragtime
  • Jazz and blues- Blind Lemon Jefferson and Huddie
    (Leadbelly) Ledbetter

19
Dawn of the Alamo
20
The Battle of San Jacinto
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