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THE RISE OF THE CITY

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Title: THE RISE OF THE CITY


1
THE RISE OF THE CITY
  • AMH 2020

2
The Brooklyn Bridge
3
The Brooklyn Bridge
  • Location Manhattan and Brooklyn, New York, USA
  • Completion Date 1883
  • Cost 18 millionLength 3,460 feet
  • Type Suspension
  • Materials Steel, granite
  • Longest Single Span 1,595 feet
  • Engineers John A. Roebling, Washington A.
    Roebling

4
John Roebling
  • Died from lock jaw complications after bridge
    accident severed toed on his foot.

5
Roebling Designs
6
Washington Roebling
  • Took over after his Fathers death
  • Developed the bends
  • and then directing building from window of his
    residence using a telescope

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Emily Warren Roebling
  • Took over as site supervisor and manager
  • Earned a law degree and championed women's
    suffrage.

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Caisson Design
10
Deaths During the Building
  • John Roebling, Thomas Blake, Cope, Daugherty,
    Thomas Douglas, McCann, Patrick McKay, Neil
    Mullen, John Myers, William Reardon, Reed, Harry
    Supple, Anonymous 1, Anonymous 2, Anonymous 3,
    Memorial Day 1883, Avoy, Brooks, Matthew Burns,
    Matthew Byrne, Patrick Collins, Francis Demel
    Drake, Michael Duddy,l Johnston, Koen, Lars
    Kornelius Larsen, James McLaren, John Maronna,
    Murphy, John Murphy, John Nakis, Johannes
    Heinrich Seifer, Walter Solley, Thomas Talbot,
    Tinney, Robert C. Quinn, Anonymous 4

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Bridge Construction
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Rise of the City
  • Chicago 100,000 in 1860 to 1,000,000 by 1890
  • Cities with 100,000 population 1870 only 18 by
    1900 38
  • By 1900 New York, Chicago, and Philadelphia all
    had more than a million inhabitants

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Economic Regions 1890
15
Immigration
  • Old Immigration before 1880 Germans, Irish,
    English, and Scandinavians 85 of newcomers
  • After 1880 Italians, Hungarians, Eastern European
    Jews, Turks, Armenians, Poles, Russians, and
    other Slavic peoples made up 80 by 1896
  • Each succeeding wave of immigration was seen as
    inferior to the previous wave

16
Statue of Liberty
  • Sculptor Frederic Auguste Bartholdi was
    commissioned to design a sculpture with the year
    1876 in mind for completion, to commemorate the
    centennial of the American Declaration of
    Independence.
  • Alexandre Gustave Eiffel (designer of the Eiffel
    Tower) was commissioned to design the massive
    iron pylon and secondary skeletal framework
  • On October 28th 1886, the dedication of the
    Statue of Liberty took place

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Statue of Liberty Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi
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Statue of Liberty Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi
20
Statue of Liberty Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi
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Statue of Liberty Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi
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Statue of Liberty Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi
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Statue of Liberty Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi
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Statue of Liberty Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi
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Statue of Liberty Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi
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Statue of Liberty Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi
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Statue of Liberty Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi
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Statue of Liberty Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi
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Statue of Liberty Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi
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Statue of Liberty Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi
31
The New Colossus by Emma Lazarus
  • Not like the brazen giant of Greek fame,
  • With conquering limbs astride from land to
    landHere at our sea-washed, sunset gates shall
    standA mighty woman with a torch, whose flameIs
    the imprisoned lightning, and her name Mother of
    Exiles.From her beacon-handGlows world-wide
    welcome her mild eyes commandThe air-bridged
    harbor that twin cities frame."Keep, ancient
    lands, your storied pomp!" cries sheWith silent
    lips. Give me your tired, your poor,Your
    huddled masses yearning to breathe free,The
    wretched refuse of your teeming shore.Send
    these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me,I lift
    my lamp beside the golden door!

32
Ellis Island -- 1900
  • Built to process the stream of immigrants

33
Ellis Island -- 1900
34
Ellis Island -- 1900
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Ellis Island -- 1900
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Ellis Island -- 1900
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Ellis Island -- 1900
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Ellis Island -- 1900
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Ellis Island -- 1900
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Ellis Island -- 1900
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Ellis Island -- 1900
42
Two Groups Treated Worse with Rise of
Anti-Immigration
43
Jim Crow Laws
  • Jim Crow laws came in many forms. For example,
    once such law required black people to "qualify"
    to vote by paying poll taxes, or, by reciting the
    entire Declaration of Independence or
    Constitution from memory. In 1883, the Federal
    Government ruled that it did not have the power
    to prohibit private segregation and maintained
    that separate facilities (including schools,
    restaurants, drinking fountains etc.) were
    constitutional provided that facilities were
    "equal", in the famous Plessy v. Ferguson 163 US
    537 (1896) case. Of course "equal facilities"
    were never at all equal. Other laws required
    black people to sit in the back of public buses,
    prohibited interracial marriage, and limited
    employment opportunities for black people.

44
Working Conditions
  • Sweatshops
  • Mechanization
  • Mills Girls
  • Greater gap between wealth and poverty
  • Child Labor

45
LABOR UNREST
  • Railroad Strike of 1877
  • Knights of Labor AFL
  • Haymarket

46
Great Railroad Strike of 1877
  • Panic of 1873 wages for brakemen dropped from 70
    to 30 a month
  • In !877 Baltimore Ohio Railroad slashed wages
    by 10 and at the same time gave stockholders a
    10 dividend
  • West Virginia Brakemen went on strike soon
    followed by 100,000 railroad workers
  • Nationwide 500,00 other laborers joined in

47
Railroad Strike
  • Militia called out and fired upon workers and
    supporters
  • President Rutherford B. Hayes brought in Federal
    Troops
  • Strike was broken, but spurred the need for
    organized labor

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Knights of Labor
  • Founded in 1869 as a secret universal
    brotherhood of workers
  • Advocated classless democracy
  • Advocated against child labor, equal pay for
    women workers
  • Public ownership of railroads

52
American Federation of Labor
  • Founded in 1866 by Samuel Gompers
  • Organized skilled laborers
  • Sought unionism

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Haymarket
  • Began with advocacy of 8 hour work day (12 hours
    was considered standard)
  • May 1, 1886 set aside as day of general strike
  • Leaders Albert Parsons, August Spies, Samuel
    Gompers
  • Chicago Police, Pinkerton Detectives, private
    Army hired to break the strike

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Haymarket
  • 45,000 workers marched peacefully
  • May 3 striking workers attacked scab labor
    outside McCormick Reaper works Police opened
    fire killing 6 men

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Haymarket
  • May 4 Captain Blackjack Bonfield led police to
    disperse strikers a bomb was thrown into police
    Police were ordered to kill as many men as they
    could

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Haymarket
  • Eight men went on trial none were connected in
    the bombing
  • Convicted for radical ideas four executed, one
    committed suicide, three received prison
    sentences
  • 1893 Governor John Peter Altgeld pardoned the
    three remaining defendants and declared the trail
    a travesty of justice

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Work time 2004
64
2007
  • 2000 TO 2007 yearly increase in United States of
    people in poverty and extreme poverty
  • 2007 most percentage of population in both
    categories of poverty in over 30 years
  • Less than 9 of American workers are represented
    by a Union or some form of collective bargaining

65
The White City
  • Amusement Parks
  • Skyscrapers
  • Rags to Riches myth
  • Technological Progress
  • Worlds Columbian Exposition in 1893

66
1893 Worlds Columbian Exposition in Chicago
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Just Around the Corner
  • Herman Webster Mudgett (May 16, 1860 May 7,
    1896), better known under the alias of "Dr. H. H.
    Holmes," was Americas first modern serial
    killer.
  • Built a Murder Mansion blocks from the White
    City

76
The Murder Castle
  • Holmes used some of the rooms as "asphyxiation
    chambers", where his victims were suffocated with
    gas. Other chambers were lined with iron plates
    and had blowtorch-like devices fitted into the
    walls. In the basement, Holmes installed a
    dissecting table and maintained his own
    crematory. There was also an acid vat and pits
    filled with quicklime, where bodies could be
    conveniently disposed of.

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  • All of his "prison rooms" were fitted with alarms
    that buzzed in Holmes quarters if a victim
    attempted to escape. He confessed to 27
    murders, although the actual numbers are in the
    hundreds, most of the victims were women.

79
  • The "chamber of horrors" in the basement was
    located seven feet below the rest of the building
    and extended out under the sidewalk in front.
    Here was Holmes blood-spattered dissecting
    table, his gleaming surgical instruments, his
    macabre "laboratory" of torture devices, various
    jars of poison and even a wooden box that
    contained a number of female skeletons. Built
    into one of the walls was a crematorium, with a
    heavy iron grate to hold the fire and another
    grate, fitted with rollers, by which a body could
    be slid into the flames. There were souvenirs
    from many of the murders.

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  • During trial and while awaiting execution H H
    Holmes wrote a book about his exploits. Pleading
    both innocence, insanity, and possession by Satan
    he was executed May 7, 1896, just nine days
    before his 36th birthday.

82
?
  • How is it that the modern serial killer (Jack the
    Ripper in London and H. H. Homes in the United
    States came out of the same era as The Rise of
    The City, Rapid Capitalist Expansion, Extreme Gap
    Between Rich and Poor, Evolution of the Assembly
    Line, and the Belief in a Utopian City?

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The End
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