Title: Daily Life in the Gilded Age
1Daily Life in the Gilded Age
- Chapter 17 Section 1
- Angela Brown
2Education
- End of the Civil War ½ of white children attended
free public schools. - High school diploma the exception
- 1870 2 of 17 year olds graduated from high
school few went to college - 1900 31 states had laws requiring children ages
8-14 to attend school. - 1910 60 U.S. children attended school with
more than a million students in high school.
3Immigrants and Education
- Many immigrants placed a high value on U.S.
public education. - One of the most important functions of public
schools was to teach literacy. - Literacy Skills the ability to read and write
- Public school played a role in assimilating
immigrants to the American way of life.
4- Assimilation the process by which people of one
culture become part of another. - Teachers taught thrift, patriotism and hard work.
- Fearing Americanization, many immigrants sent
their children to religious schools where they
could learn their own cultural traditions in
their native language. - As immigrants shared customs and habits from
their own homelands, they enriched their new
country and helped to redefine American culture.
5Uneven Support for Schools
- Schools for African Americans received far less
money than white schools. - Mexican American in parts of the Southwest and
California were segregated and less funded. - 1900, a small percentage of Native American
children were receiving any formal schooling.
6Higher Education Expands
- 1880-1900 more than 250 new American colleges and
universities opened. - Rockefeller 40 million to University of Chicago.
- 1890s average annual incomes just under a
thousand dollars. - Few could afford college.
- 1915 some middle income families to college.
- The availability of advanced education would
distinguish the U.S. from other industrialized
nations.
7Women in Higher Education
- Educators and philanthropists established private
womens colleges with high academic standards. - 1865 Vassar College, NY
- Under pressure to admit women, some mens
colleges founded separate institutions for women.
8- 1873 Cornwell and Boston University welcomed
women as students and professors. - 1879 Harvard in Massachusetts established
Radcliffe. - 1886 Tulane University in Louisiana established
Sophie Newcomb College. - 1889 Columbia in NY opened Barnard.
9- 1891 Brown in Rhode Island started Pembroke.
- Coed universities Oberlin, Knox, Antioch,
Swarthmore, and Bates existed before the Civil
War. - Most scholarships went to men, if they could
afford college parents feared college made
daughters too independent or unmarriageable
unacceptable friends.
10African Americans and Higher Education
- Had to fight prejudice
- Oberlin, Bates, Bowdoin accepted African
Americans - 1890 160 African Americans attending white
colleges. - African American Colleges Fisk, Atlanta
Hampton Institute and Howard founded through
American Missionary Association.
11- 1856 Wilberforce University in Ohio - nations
oldest African American school - 1900 2,000 students had graduation from 34
African American schools - African American colleges accepted both women and
men however it has been estimated that 30 black
women were in college in 1891.
12Booker T. Washington
- 1856 born into slavery
- 1872 attended Hampton Institute in Virginia.
- Founded Tuskegee Institute in 1881.
- Taught skills and attitudes to help succeed in
life put aside desire for political equality.
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14Booker T. Washington
- Focused on economic security by gaining
vocational skills. - Win white acceptance eventually by succeeding
economically - Relieved fears of whites who thought education
would call for more equality within society.
15Booker T. Washington
- Washington was consulted by whites on race
relations. - T. Roosevelt invited him to the White House in
1901. - Autobiography, Up From Slavery 1901 classic
16W.E.B. DuBois
- Graduated Fisk University
- 1895 first African American to earn a Ph.D from
Harvard. - Taught at Atlanta University.
- 1905 help found Niagara Movement.
- A group of African Americans called for full
civil liberties, an end to racial discrimination,
and recognition of Human brotherhood.
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18W.E.B. DuBois
- DuBois argued the brightest African Americans had
to lead their people in a quest for political and
social equality and civil rights. - Urged advanced liberal arts education rather than
vocational like Washington. - Rejected Washingtons message Atlanta Compromise
19- 1910 became publications director for NAACP.
- (National Association for the Advancement of
Colored People) - Be proud of African and American heritage he
stressed. - Wrote, The Souls of Black Folk