Title: American Society 18301860
1American Society 1830-1860
- Northern and Western Societies
- African American Culture
- Diversity and Increasing Division between North
and South
2North and West
- Every town has its own culture and the North and
West consisted of diverse peoples, communities,
lifestyles, economies, and environments - West weve talked about a great deal with
WebQuest projects - Country Life
- Urban areas
3Country Life
- 19th century changed rural life
- Farm population declines as towns grew and
manufacturing increased - Also, many families moved West
- Market economy changed nature of farming
4Country Life
- Railroad and post office
- Farms more connected to other communities
- Farm communities
- Still, largely communal
- Communal values
- Help out neighbors
- Recreation, parties, celebrations, growing food,
all done together as a community - Country Bees
- Neighbors gathered
- Make apple butter or preserves
- Eat, play, enjoy each others company
5Urban areas
- Growth of cities
- Already discussed Europeans immigrants before
Revolution started to settle in cities - European immigrants continue to settle in cities
- Also large increase in Rural Migration
- Many free African Americans and newly freed
slaves settled in cities - 1830 population of US 12.9 million
- 1860 population of US 31.4 million
- 1830 only 23 cities with 10,000
- 1860 93 cities with 10,000
- 1860 9 cities exceeded 100,000
6Urban Areas
- NYC was major commercial center
- Baltimore and New Orleans dominated South
- San Francisco was leading western city
- Midwest Chicago, Detroit, Cleveland
- Nationwide network of canals, roads, railroads
and the telegraph
7New York City
- Most populous city
- Major commercial center
- 1830 202,000 people
- 1860 over 814,000
- Irish and German immigrants
- Most residents only short-term
- NY was ever-changing, full of energy, reeking of
sweat, horse dung and garbage p.304
8Cities and Transportation
- Mass transit made city life possible
- Mass transit made city expansion possible
- Boundaries of NYC grew could no longer walk the
length of city - Horse-drawn streetcars
- Harlem railroad
9City Life
- Influx of people
- Problems occur
- No sanitation system
- Disease
- Unhealthy and unsafe conditions
- These conditions that came to light in 1850s
would be the main focus of the Progressive
Movement by the 1890s
10City Problems
- No sanitation (first sewers in 1850s)
- People relieved themselves outside
- Smell
- Spread disease
- Polluted water
- No garbage pickup (until late 1840s not
regularly until much later) - Cities disorderly, unsafe, unhealthy
11Riots in Cities
- Why?
- What factors at play?
- Competition for jobs between native-born
Americans and new immigrants - Gangs of New York film
- Riots commonplace in 1830s economic, political,
social, racial, and ethnic conflicts - All classes involved professionals, merchants,
craftsmen, laborers - Slavery issue ignited riots between
abolitionists and pro-slavery advocates - Nativism
- Philadelphia
- 1828 native born workers attacked Irish
weavers - 1834 whites and blacks fought on the docks
- 1844 Protestant skilled workers attacked Irish
Catholics
12Public Education in Cities
- Although lacking in some public services, cities
often led in the development of public schools - 1800 only New England offered public education
- 1860 every state offered public education to
whites
13Public Education
- Horace Mann secretary of education from 1837 to
1848 in Massachusetts - Formalized training of teachers
- Minimum school year of 6 months
- Mann advocated free, state sponsored education
- Universal education
- Mann said it would end misery and crime
- Give diverse children shared values
- Women in educational system
- Universal not really universal racialized
system - Free black children often not included
14Public Schools
- New values and purpose
- Previously, focused on literacy, religious
training and discipline - Mann
- Curriculum became secular
- Appropriate for future clerks, farmers, and
workers - Studied geography, history, math, science
- Retained moral education, but not focus on
certain religion
15Leisure in Cities
- New patterns of leisure
- Public sphere of socialization
- Streets, theaters, sports fields
- Unlike in rural areas where leisure took place in
homes - Leisure as commodity
- Leisure associations reflected ethnic, racial and
class divisions
16Leisure associations
- Extremely important to new immigrant groups
- Helped build communities within cities
- Leisure groups also started to provide public
services for their members (banking, stores,
etc.) Network and community building through
leisure - Race, ethnic, class and gender issues
17Recreation and Leisure
- Taverns, drinking and games
- Fishing
- Church clubs as important socializing places
- Theater
- Sports
18Recreation and Gender
- Theater
- Social sphere where men and women gathered
- Respectable place for women to be seen out in
public - Proper women did not frequent taverns
- Similar reasons to why the department store
becomes a major development to increase womens
role in society (in public)
19City Culture and Communities
- Churches and church associations
- Public leisure
- Youth culture
- Streets of New York as place of leisure
- Appropriated streets for their recreation youth
culture - Young working women also experienced public
recreation and leisure in NY - Young working women differed from genteel,
refined and proper women - Class and gender and race all intertwined in
defining leisure - Also private clubs and associations
- Space and occasions for leisure outside of crowds
and rowdiness - Fragmented society
- Class, race, ethnic lines
20Reading
- Did Literacy invoke the Civil War?
- What effect did it have?
- Widespread reading of newspapers
- Published accounts
- William Lloyd Garrisons Liberator
- Uncle Toms Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe
21Power of Print
- The American Anti-Slavery Society was created in
1833 by such leading abolitionists as Arthur and
Lewis Tappan and William Lloyd Garrison. - The organization published an annual almanac
containing essays, poems, and illustrations in
support of the abolitionist cause. - This poster shows a collection of illustrations
from the 1840 edition of the Anti-Slavery
Almanac. The drawings depict the brutal treatment
of slaves by their masters.
22Illustration from The American Anti-Slavery
Almanac
23Reading as great equalizer
- Literacy could allow more and more Americans to
find out news and to learn about politics and to
participate in politics - Did this help further equality?
- Yes in what ways?
- No in what ways?
24Wealth and Class Divisions
- Great fortunes to be made in cities
- 1845 - 19 millionaires in NY
- 1855 28 millionaires
- Wealth concentrated in hands of few
- NY 4 of population held 63-80 of wealth
- Many ordinary people lost wealth
- Bottom 2/3rds of families wealth decreased from
10 to almost nothing from 1810-1841
25Class Divisions
- Urban elite
- Fancy dinners
- Parties
- Country estates, ocean resorts, mineral spas,
tours of Europe - Wealth primarily inherited
- Urban slums
- Poor working men and women
- Feared and dreaded poverty, chronic illness,
disability, old age, widowhood and desertion - Tenements overcrowded
- Increased class, race and ethnic tensions
26Middle class
- Distinct middle class
- Small in number, but significant
- Businessmen, traders, and professionals in market
economy - Middle class families
- Enjoyed some new consumer goods wool carpeting,
wallpaper, furniture - By 1850s used indoor toilets
- Children slept one to a bed
- Houses large with 4-6 rooms
27Diversity in America
- Ethnic diversity
- Rise of immigration
- Why was there a rise in immigration?
- Market Economy
28Immigrants lives
- 5 million immigrants from 1830-1860 entered US
- Immigrants
- Ireland (1.9 million)
- German (1.5 million)
- Britain (767,000)
- Largest era of immigration was 1851-1860
- Chinese immigrants mostly men
29Immigration
- Promotion of Immigration
- Economic, political, religious reasons for coming
- Market economy needed workers so immigration was
promoted by businesses - Recruitment of immigrants
- North, West, Midwest
30Immigrants lives
- Optimistic
- Disillusionment
- Hardships
- Letters home encouraged even more immigration
there was work here, regardless of how horrible
the conditions were - Thousands returned home disappointed
- Too much hype parallels to Europeans first
settlements in New England (Cronons article
group 1, project 1)
31Race and Ethnicity
- Racial ideas and immigration
- Language, dialect, facial features, religion as
well as skin color many types of
characteristics to distinguish race - Race and ethnicity
- What is difference?
- Is there a difference between these two?
- Has there always been a difference?
32Immigrants Lives
- Irish
- 1845-49 Ireland death by starvation,
malnutrition and typhus - 1 million died great famine
- 750,000 came to US
- Peak of immigration 1847-54
- New immigrants were young, female, poor, rural
and Catholic - Women worked in textile mills and houses
- Men worked transportation and construction
- Supported families and neighbors in Irish
enclaves in cities - Built many Catholic churches and schools
- Established networks of charitable and social
organizations - Often treated as non-whites
- What does this say about racial ideology?
33Role of Religion
- Anti-Catholicism
- Why?
- Think of beginnings of nation
- Economics, anxiety, tensions, racial ideologies
- What effect did this have?
- What about our Presidents?
- John F. Kennedy (1960) first Catholic President
34Immigrants Lives
- Germans
- Largely Protestant
- Viewed as white
- Maintained German customs and institutions
- Large number of craftsmen were German immigrants
- Non-Protestant Germans were not treated as well
as Protestant Germans
35Immigrants Lives
- Hispanics
- Florida to Texas, Southwest to California
- Became immigrants without moving anywhere
- Treaties placed them in US
- Some unhappy, some optimistic about the political
democracy and self-government opportunities - Didnt live up to promise
- Many Texas Mexicans had fought for independence
but then treated as inferiors and foreigners - Second-class citizens on land where they had
lived for generations - Still maintained culture and traditions
- Hispanics considered non-white
- Descended from Indians and Spaniards
- Anglo-Americans believed Spanish were inferior,
lazy, and decadent and they applied these
stereotypes of Hispanics
36Diversity in North and West
- Not only religious and new immigrants groups
- Also, continued increase in free black population
- Was everyone in North and West open to the idea
of free blacks settling in their communities? - Was this really a tolerant place free of racism?
37African American Communities
- African Americans celebrated freedom holidays,
commemorating emancipation and protesting own
inequality and the persistence of slavery - August 1 anniversary of West Indian
emancipation - Douglass first of August is like the white
mans 4th of July - As black population grew, so did racism
- African American population
- 2.3 million in 1830 to 4.4 million in 1860 (slave
and free) - Half of free African American population lived in
North - Despite differences in occupation, wealth,
education, religion and social status, free
blacks were united and self-defense promoted
solidarity - Discrimination and Exclusion
38Growth of African American population
- Frederick Douglas and Harriet Tubman cam north as
fugitive slaves - Why risk it?
- Why continually risk life by involvement in
Underground Railroad?
39African American Communities
- Always strong, even under slavery
- No surprise that free blacks built even stronger
communities - Churches
- Themes of equality, exodus and freedom
- Black churches male and female preachers
played central roles in communities - Voluntary Associations became hallmark of black
communities - Literary societies
- Schools
- Mutual aid societies
40African American Communities
- Political Activism
- White racism dominant force in society
- Fought for equal rights
- Right to vote
- Middle class leadership
- Black newspapers
- Fought second-class status as well as end to
slavery - Abolitionism
41Discrimination
- Northern and western states barred free blacks
from entering or required bonds from 500-1000
to guarantee their good conduct - Voting only allowed in Massachusetts, New
Hampshire, Vermont and Maine - Oregon blacks could not own property, make
contracts or sue in court - Also, economic restrictions
- Excluded from many jobs
- Many opened restaurants, taverns, hotels, barber
shops and employment agencies for domestic
servants
42African American Communities
- Growth of black middle class
- Forged own cultural identity
- Colored Americans instead of Africans to
reflect growing participation in public life - Dual identity
- African descendents
- Americans
- Dances and other forms of entertainment and
recreation combined elements of African
tradition as well as American culture
43Social and Political Developments
- North and West
- Diversity
- Strong communities
- Middle Class
- Reform movements
- Literacy
- Religious movements
- Injustice of slavery becomes an issue
44United States?
- North and West
- Social, cultural, political, economic differences
from South - Were we still a united states?
- Was any area really united?
45North/West and South
- Similarities
- South shared much in common with rest of nation
- Geographic sizes roughly equal NS
- White southerners idolized Revolutionary heroes
- Spoke same language
- Worshiped same Protestant God
- Shared common mixture of nationalism and localism
- States rights doctrine important in both N S
- Westward dreams manifest destiny frontier
visions - Class divisions
- Wealth concentrated in hands of few elite white
men - Market economy affected both plantations in
South as well as factories/mills in North
46North/West and South
- Differences
- Climate and longer growing season
- Effect of the environment power of environment
to affect society - Rural and agricultural
- Intense attachment to place
- Biracial society of brutal inequality
- Liberty of one race depended on enslavement of
another White wealth built upon black labor - Low population density large, spread out
plantations
47North/West and South
- Differences
- Low population density means people were scarce
- Difficult to operate schools, churches,
libraries, or even inns and restaurants - Factories rare because planters invested capital
in slaves - South lagged behind North in industrial growth
- South only had 35 of the nations railroads by
1860 - Some urban centers New Orleans, Charleston
- Small and not as developed cities as North
- Less immigration less jobs available