Ch. 10.2-Urbanization.  Explain the technological developments that made the growth of cities possible.  Analyze problems that were caused.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Urbanization, the Emergence of Social Classes and Problems in the City.
Advertisements

Urbanization Migration to the Cities. Learning Targets Describe how people moved from one place to another in big cities in the late 1800s. Know what.
The Gilded Age
Mr. Ermer U.S. History Miami Beach Senior High.  : NYC grows from 800,000 to 3.5 Mil.  Farmers and Immigrants move to cities  Rising land.
Chapter 15 – Urban America
Click the mouse button to display the information. Americans Migrate to the Cities The urban population of the United States grew from about 10 million.
Section 6-2 Urbanization. Urban Opportunities Urbanization- growth of cities, mostly in the regions of the Northeast and Midwest. Americanization Movement-
6.2 Urbanization. I. Migrating to the City A.Urban population of the U.S. grew rapidly by Immigrants with little money found jobs here 2.Mechanization.
Urbanization: Gilded Age Urbanization ■From 1870 to 1900, American cities grew 700% due to new job opportunities in factories: –European, Latin.
Section 2 - Urbanization. Americans Migrate to the Cities Rural Americans and immigrants moved to the cities where skyscrapers and mass transit were developed.
Urbanization During the three decades after the Civil War, the urban population of the United States, those living in towns with a population of 2,500.
Splash Screen. Section 2-Main Idea Big Ideas Government and Society The growth of and problems in major cities led to political machines that controlled.
Section 6-2 Urbanization.
Chapter 6 Section 2 Urbanization
URBANIZATION Part 2. Americans Migrate to the City  Urban Population grew from 10 million to 30 million.  131 cities with populations of 2500 or more.
Americans Migrate to Cities  NYC = 800,000 (1860) and 3.5 million (1900)  Immigrants  Lacked $ to buy farms and edu for higher paying jobs  Rural.
Urban America Chapter 10 Notes. The Impact Today Industrialization and Urbanization permanently influenced American life. Industrialization and Urbanization.
Immigration. Women Workers 18% of Labor Force Most domestic servants Paid less than men Mary Harris Jones “Mother Jones” Women’s Trade Union League WTUL.
Section 2-Urbanization Click the Speaker button to listen to the audio again.
Chapter 15-1 Notes 15-1 Immigration.
Getting to California skyscraper – as city populations grew and technology improved, many cities grew upwards instead of outwards Louis Sullivan – Chicago.
Gilded Age. Cities expanded to sizes never seen before, masses of workers swarmed the streets, skyscrapers reached to the sky and electric lights banished.
Ch 10, Sec 2: Urbanization. Population Growth of Cities Immigration caused cities to grow from – New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, Boston 2,500.
 By 1900 majority of immigrants were from eastern and southern Europe  Push – Pull factors  The Atlantic voyage - steerage.
Chapter 19 TOWARD AN URBAN SOCIETY, 1877–1900. Urban and Rural Population, 1870–1900 (in millions)
Urbanization Chapter 15 Section 2. A New Urban Environment Price in land rose Price in land rose Gives owners incentive to grow up instead of out Gives.
Urban America. Chapter 10 Section 2 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Guide to Reading During the three decades.
Chapter 10 Sect. 1 I.European Immigration A.Eastern and Southern Europe 1. By 1900 over half of all immigrants Million Immigrants between
Rise of the City. From Farm to City Before the Civil War most people lived on farms –1860 urban population of 6 million By 1900 most people lived in urban.
Urbanization. Americans Migrate to the Cities The city offered many things that the rural areas did not – electricity, running water, modern plumbing.
Chapter 13 Section 2 Urbanization Appointment Clock.
Immigration & Urbanization. Cities expanded to sizes never seen before, masses of workers swarmed the streets, skyscrapers reached to the sky and electric.
6:2 ● Urbanization ● Migrating to cities ● 1870:10 million ● 1900: 30 million ● “skyscrapers” (Louis Sullivan) – Build upward, not outward.
Chapter 15 Urban America Section 2 Urbanization. Americans Migrate to Cities  The urban population of the U.S. grew from about 10 million in 1870 to.
Chapter 15, Section 2 “Urbanization”. Americans Migrate to the Cities Immigrants coming to U.S. didn’t have money to buy farms Lacked education for higher.
Gilded Age CH. 10 Immigration, urbanization,. Immigration Europeans flood into the US in late 19 th century – Italians. Greeks, poles Russian Eastern.
URBANIZATION The urban population of the U. S. grew from about 10,000,000 in 1870 to over 30,000,000 by 1900 The urban population of the U. S. grew from.
US History January  After the Civil War US population:  10 million (1870)30 million (1900)  NYC: 800,000 (1860)3.5 million (1900)  1840: 131.
URBANIZATION - CHAPTER 10, SECTION 2 By Mr. Thomas Parsons.
Intro 1 Click the Speaker button to listen to the audio again.
Chapter 15 Urban America. Immigration Who? ► II. Asia  A. Japanese  B. Chinese ► I. Europe  A. Italians  B. Greeks  C. Poles  D. Slavs  E. Slovaks.
Life in the Big City. New York City Population in 1860: 800,000 Population in 1900: 3,500,000 Where should we put our stuff?
Urbanization.
URBANIZATION SECTION 2 US History/Geography.
COS Standard 1 Explain the transition of the US from the agrarian society to the industrial nation prior to WWI.
Chapter Vocab Words Chinese Exclusion Act Urbanization Tenement
URBANIZATION - CHAPTER 10, SECTION 2 By Mr. Bruce Diehl
URBANIZATION - CHAPTER 10, SECTION 2 By Mr. Thomas Parsons
“In the City” Urban America in the late 1800s
Chapter 6.2 Urbanization.
The Growth of Cities.
Big City Big Problems.
By: Haley Campbell and Megan Gooch
Urbanization.
The Challenges of Urbanization
Urbanization & The Gilded Age
Ch 15 Notes Sections 2-3.
Immigrants & the Cities
You spend a day in San Francisco. How is it different from Novato?
Robber Barons and Political Machines
Immigration and Urbanization
Unsafe living conditions
America Moves to the Cities
Americans Migrate to the Cities
Industrialization and Daily Struggles
WARM UP= PAGE 17 Going Over Exit Tickets.
Urbanization Mr. Turner.
America’s Cities in the 1900s
Urbanization.
“Urbanization” Chapter 10 Section 2.
Presentation transcript:

Ch Urbanization

 Explain the technological developments that made the growth of cities possible.  Analyze problems that were caused by mass urbanization during the Industrial Revolution time period in the U.S.

I. Migration to Cities A. Causes: 1. Immigrants 2. Rural to Urban Migration *What are some push & pull factors leading to this change?

II. New City Environments A. Skyscrapers 1. Material Improvements a. reinforced concrete b. steel beams 2. Designers a. Frank Loyd Wright b. Louie Sullivan B. Mass Transit 1. Cable Cars (SF) 2. Electric Trolley 3. Subways

 a. Frank Lloyd Wright.  b.Potter Palmer.  c.Louis Sullivan.  d.Frank J. Sprague.

 a. trolley cars.  b.tunnels.  c.overpasses.  d.subway systems.

III. Separation by Class A. High Society -American Castles B. Middle-Class Gentility -streetcar suburbs C. Working Class - tenements–dark and crowded multi-family apartments

 a. tenement system.  b.middle class.  c.agricultural system.  d.political machine.

IV. Urban Problems A. Crime B. Disease C. Nativism D. Child Labor E. Pollution

V. Corrupt Urban Politics A. Political Machines ex: “Tammany Hall” B. Party Bosses 1. George Plunkitt 2. William “Boss” Tweed C. Graft - gaining money dishonestly through political means.

 a.Thomas Pendergast  b.Cornelius Vanderbilt  c.George Plunkitt  d.Zalmen Yoffeh

 a.Tammany Hall  b.Tammany Tweed  c.Thomas Pendergast Machine  d.William M. Tweed Hall