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TOWARD AN URBAN SOCIETY, 18771900

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City becomes a symbol of the new America between 1870-1900. Explosive urban growth ... some bosses notoriously corrupt, e.g. William Tweed of New York City ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: TOWARD AN URBAN SOCIETY, 18771900


1
TOWARD AN URBAN SOCIETY, 1877-1900
  • America Past and Present
  • Chapter 19

2
The Lure of the City
  • City becomes a symbol of the new America between
    1870-1900
  • Explosive urban growth
  • sources included immigration, movement from
    countryside
  • six cities over 500,000 by 1900

3
Skyscrapers and Suburbs
  • Steel permits construction of skyscrapers
  • Streetcars allow growth of suburbs
  • Two defining characteristics of American city

4
Tenements and the Problems of Overcrowding
  • Tenements house urban dwellers
  • Tenement problems
  • inadequate sanitation
  • poor ventilation
  • polluted water
  • Urban problems
  • poor public health
  • juvenile crime

5
Strangers in a New Land
  • By 1900 most urban dwellers foreign-born or
    children of immigrants
  • 1880s--eastern, southern European immigrants
    prompt resurgent Nativism
  • Nativist organizations try to limit immigration

6
Immigration to the United States, 1870-1900
7
Foreign-born Population, 1890
8
Immigrants and the CityFamilies and Ethnic
Identity
  • Immigrants marry within own ethnic groups
  • More children born to immigrants than to
    native-born Americans

9
Immigrants and the CityInstitutions
  • Immigrant associations
  • preserve old country language and customs
  • aid the process of adjustment
  • Immigrant establish religious, educational
    institutions, media which preserve traditions

10
The House That Tweed Built
  • Urban party machines headed by bosses
  • some bosses notoriously corrupt, e.g. William
    Tweed of New York City
  • most trade services for votes
  • Most bosses improve conditions in cities

11
Social and Cultural Change 1877-1900
  • End of Reconstruction marks shift of attention to
    new concerns
  • Population growth
  • 1877--47 million
  • 1900--76 million
  • 1900 population more diverse
  • Urbanization, industrialization changing all
    aspects of American life

12
Urban and Rural Population, 1870-1900 (in
millions)
13
Manners and Mores
  • Victorian morality dictates dress, manners
  • Protestant religious values strong
  • Reform underpinned by Protestantism

14
Leisure and Entertainment
  • Domestic leisure--card, parlor, yard games
  • Sentimental ballads, ragtime popular
  • Entertainment outside home
  • circus immensely popular
  • baseball, football, basketball
  • Street lights, streetcars make evening a time for
    entertainment and pleasure

15
Changes in Family Life
  • Urbanization, industrialization alter family
  • Family life virtually disappears among
    poorly-paid working class
  • Suburban commute takes fathers from middle-class
    homes
  • Tensions for women
  • domesticity encouraged
  • identity as mere housewife almost shameful

16
Changing Views A Growing Assertiveness among
Women
  • "New women"--self-supporting careers
  • Demand an end to gender discrimination
  • Speak openly about once-forbidden topics

17
Educating the Masses
  • Few students reach the sixth grade
  • Teaching unimaginative, learning passive
  • Segregation, poverty compound problems of
    Southern education
  • 1896Plessy v. Ferguson allows "separate but
    equal" schools

18
Higher Education
  • Colleges and universities flourish
  • Greater emphasis on professions, research
  • More women achieve college education

19
Higher Education African Americans
  • African Americans usually confined to all-black
    institutions like Tuskegee Institute in Alabama
  • Booker T. Washingtonself-help and concentrate
    on practical education
  • W.E.B. DuBoishigher education is key to success

20
The Stirrings of Reform
  • Social Darwinists see attempts at social reform
    as useless and harmful
  • Reformers begin to seek changes in U.S. living,
    working conditions

21
Progress and Poverty
  • Henry George the rich getting richer, the poor,
    poorer
  • Georges solution tax land, wealths source

22
New Currents in Social Thought
  • Liberal Protestants preach "Social Gospel"
  • purpose reform industrial society
  • means introduce Christian standards into
    society
  • Washington Gladden

23
The Settlement Houses
  • Famous House
  • 1889--Jane Addams' Hull House, Chicago
  • Characteristics
  • many workers women
  • classical, practical education for poor
  • study social composition of neighborhood

24
A Crisis in Social Welfare
  • Depression of 1893 reveals insufficiency of
    private charity
  • New professionalism in social work
  • New efforts to understand povertys sources
  • Increasing calls for government intervention
  • Social tensions engender sense of crisis
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