Title: Chapter 19 CITIES and IMMIGRANTS
1Chapter 19 CITIES and IMMIGRANTS
- AMERICA BECOMES A MELTING POT IN THE LATE 19TH
EARLY 20TH CENTURY
2Section 1 Problems Arise as Cities Grow
- Urbanization
- Housing
- Row-House
- Tenements
- Dumbbell Tenements
- Transportation
- Water Sanitation
- Law Order
- Firefighting
3- Rapid urbanization occurred in the late 19th
century in the Northeast Midwest - Most immigrants settled in cities because of the
available jobs affordable housing - By 1910, immigrants made up more than half the
population of 18 major American cities
4Americanization Movement
- Education program designed to help immigrants
assimilate to American culture. - Taught English and American culture.
- Urbanization the growth of cities.
- Immigrants lived in ethnic neighborhoods where
people spoke the same language. - People moved from the farms to the cities for
jobs in the factories.
5URBAN PROBLEMS
- Problems in American cities in the late 19th and
early 20th century included - Housing overcrowded tenements were unsanitary
- Sanitation garbage was often not collected,
polluted air
Famous photographer Jacob Riis captured the
struggle of living in crowded tenements
6URBAN PROBLEMS CONTINUED
- Transportation Cities struggled to provide
adequate transit systems - Water Without safe drinking water cholera and
typhoid fever was common - Crime As populations increased thieves
flourished - Fire Limited water supply, wooden structures
combined with the use of candles led to major
urban fires Chicago 1871 and San Francisco 1906
were two major fires
Harpers Weekly image of Chicagoans fleeing the
fire over the Randolph Street bridge in 1871
7PHOTOGRAPHER JACOB RIIS CAPTURED IMAGES OF THE
CITY
8Jacob Riis
9Jacob Riis
10Jacob Riis
11Jacob Riis
12Jacob Riis
13Jacob Riis
14Section 1 Continued
- Segregation
- Great Migration
- Jim Crow Laws
- De Facto Segregation
- De Jure Segregation
- Ghettos
15Segregation
- De facto segregation exists by practice custom
(choice) - De jure segregation segregation by law.
(difficult to fight this!)
16SECTION 2 POLITICAL MACHINES ACQUIRE MORE POWER
- As cities grew in the late 19th century, so did
political machines - Political machines controlled the activities of a
political party in a city - Ward bosses, precinct captains, and the city boss
worked to ensure their candidate was elected
17ROLE OF THE POLITICAL BOSS
- The Boss controlled jobs, business licenses,
and influenced the court system - Precinct captains and ward bosses were often 1st
or 2nd generation immigrants so they helped
immigrants with naturalization, jobs, and housing
in exchange for votes
Boss Tweed ran NYC
18MUNICIPAL GRAFT AND SCANDAL
- Some political bosses were corrupt
- Some political machines used fake names and voted
multiple times to ensure victory (Vote early and
often) called Election fraud - Graft (bribes) was common among political bosses
- Construction contracts often resulted in
kick-backs - The fact that police forces were hired by the
boss prevented close scrutiny
19THE TWEED RING SCANDAL
- William M. Tweed, known as Boss Tweed, became
head of Tammany Hall, NYCs powerful Democratic
political machines - Between 1869-1871, Tweed led the Tweed Ring, a
group of corrupt politicians, in defrauding the
city - (10 million)
- Tweed was indicted on 120 counts of fraud and
extortion - Tweed was sentenced to 12 years in jail
released after one, arrested again, and escaped
to Spain
Boss Tweed
20Immigrants
- Immigrants were put to work for the machines
(those who spoke English). - Would tell new immigrants to follow the bosses
rules. - The political machines helped immigrants become
citizens, provided housing and jobs. - Would get votes in return.
21Section 3 New Immigrants Arrive
- 19th century immigration
- Eastern Europeans
- Cultural Differences
- Language
- Religion
- Race
22Immigration Continued
23Melting Pot
- A mixture of people from different cultures and
races. - They blend together by abandoning their native
languages and cultures. - Become American
24FRICTION DEVELOPS
- Some immigrants tried to assimilate into American
culture, others kept to themselves created
ethnic communities - Committed to culture, but tried hard to become
Americans, many came to think of themselves as
Italian-Americans, Polish-Americans,
Chinese-Americans, etc - Some native born Americans disliked the
immigrants unfamiliar customs and languages
friction soon developed
Chinatowns are found in many major cities
25EUROPEANS
- Between 1870 and 1920, about 20 million Europeans
arrived in the United States - Before 1890, most were from western and northern
Europe - After 1890, most came from southern and eastern
Europe - All were looking for opportunity
26LIFE IN THE NEW LAND
- Late 19th century most immigrants arrived via
boats - Trip from Europe took about a month, took about
3 weeks from Asia - The trip was arduous and many died along the way
- Destination was Ellis Island for Europeans, and
Angel Island for Asians
27ELLIS ISLAND, NEW YORK
- Ellis Island- arrival point for European
immigrants - Had to pass inspection at the immigration
stations - Processing took hours, and the sick were sent
home - Immigrants had to show they were not criminals,
had some money (25), and were able to work - From 1892-1924, 17 million immigrants passed
through Ellis Islands facilities
28ELLIS ISLAND, NEW YORK HARBOR
29ANGEL ISLAND, SAN FRANCISCO
- Asians, primarily Chinese, arrived on West Coast,
gained admission at Angel Island (San Francisco
Bay) - Processing was harsher than Ellis Island
- Immigrants withstood tough questioning and long
detentions in filthy conditions
30ANGEL ISLAND WAS CONSIDERED MORE HARSH THAN ELLIS
ISLAND
31Section 4 Demands Grow for Restrictions on
Immigration
As immigration increased, so did anti-immigrant
feelings among natives
Anti-Asian feelings included restaurant boycotts
32Nativism
- Favoring the interests of native-born people over
foreign-born people. - Anti-immigrant groups formed.
- Most native born Americans were Protestants.
- Did not like Jewish, Catholics, or Muslim
immigrants. - Catholics were attacked Jews were not allowed
in certain public places.
33Congress
- Congress passed a literacy test requirement for
immigrants to enter the U.S. - Had to read 40 words in English.
- President Cleveland vetoed the bill.
- It passed in 1917 when Wilson was in office, even
though he vetoed it.
34CHINESE
- Between 1851 and 1882, about 300,000 Chinese
arrived on the West Coast - Some were attracted by the Gold Rush, others went
to work for the railroads, farmed or worked as
domestic servants
Many Chinese men worked for the railroads
35Anti-Asian
- Americans were worried about jobs going to
Chinese immigrants. - Chinese Exclusion Act 1882 law where no Chinese
immigrants were allowed to enter the U.S. for 10
years. - Law was extended another 10 years in 1892.
- 1902 Chinese immigration was restricted.
- Law turned over in 1943.
36JAPANESE
- In 1884, the Japanese government allowed Hawaiian
planters to recruit Japanese workers - The U.S. annexation of Hawaii in 1898 increased
Japanese immigration to the west coast - By 1920, more than 200,000 Japanese lived on the
west coast
37Japanese
- 1906 San Francisco segregated Japanese children
and put them into separate schools. - President Theodore Roosevelt helped pass the
Gentlemens Agreement of 1907-1908. - Gentlemens Agreement Japans government agreed
to limit the number of unskilled workers going to
the U.S. if San Francisco stopped the segregation.
38Immigration Restrictions Continued
- Alien Land Law- prohibited Japanese from owning
agricultural land