9-6 How the Other Half Lives Urbanization and Immigration

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Growth of Cities in late 1800
Advertisements

Ch. 20, Section 3 Life in Cities. Urban Problems Jacob Riis – he was a journalist and photographer best known for his book “How the Other Half Lives”
DO NOW: What were the four main goals of the Progressive Movement?
Objective: SWBAT identify the living conditions immigrants endured Warm-up: 1. ***What were some of the reasons immigrants came to America? 2. Why did.
Immigration, Progressive Reform, Suffrage
Content Statement 12 Urban Disasters and Slums; Reformers Attack Urban Problems; Political Machines Run Cities Mr. Leasure 2014 – 2015 Harrison Career.
Muckrakers of the Progressive Reform Era
` Jacob Riis: How the Other Half Lives, “To-day three-fourths of its people live in the tenements, and the nineteenth century drift of the population to.
Ch Moving to the City Mrs. Manley. The US was changing from a rural (farming/ranch) to an urban (city) area!-  moved looking for JOBS! Cities.
 What is the difference between  Equality of opportunity  Equality of outcome How would you define equality?
Unit VI – A Growing America
A. Immigration of the Gilded Age “New Immigrants” Immigrants coming from new countries –Italy –Russia –Austro-Hungarian Empire Very different religions.
Population changes and growth of cities produced problems in urban areas. Urban Growth.
MOVING TO THE CITY SEC PAGES Define: urban - tenement – slum – suburb – Gilded Age – settlement house Identify: Jacob Riis – Jane Addams.
Immigrants and Urban Life Objectives: Students will learn that … 1.Crowded urban areas faced a variety of social problems. 2.People worked to improve the.
City Life Chapter 5 Section 3. Urban Problems Crowded urban areas faced a variety of social problems.
How the Other Half Lives, a photo essay by Jacob Riis.
UNIT 3 – A NATION TRANSFORMED An Immigrant’s Journey to America.
Chapter 23, 24, and 25 The Gilded Age Part 3. European Immigration Up until the 1880s most European immigrants came from Northern and Western Europe (Ireland,
Aim: How did society fix the abuses of big business? Do Now Read pages Turn in your Homework Look at the HW Board for the assignment.
9-6 How the Other Half Lives Urbanization and Immigration.
Today’s Questions 10. How did industrialization and inventions affect cities? 11. Write 5 adjectives that describe what it was like to live in a tenement.
Unit 3 A Nation Transformed What is immigration? Immigration is the act of leaving one’s homeland to live in another country, usually permanently.
The Progressive Movement Modern U.S. History – Hamer Muckraker Photography.
AIM: How did the Progressive Era Begin?. Goals of Progressivism 1. Protecting Social Welfare 2. Promote Moral Improvement 3. Create Economic Reform 4.
American History Challenge Final Jeopardy Final Jeopardy IndustrializationImmigrationImmigration II Miscellaneous Farmers Alliances
Unit 3 A Nation Transformed. Ellis Island Ellis Island opened in 1892 as a federal immigration station. Millions of newly arrived European immigrants.
Unit 2 Review Groups will be presented a prompt and will list as many correct answers as possible within 1 minute Groups earn 1 point per correct response.
More than 13.5 Million Immigrants came to the United States
Discovery Education Answers
Coming to America Coming to America was not an easy decision for immigrants. Many spent all their savings for ship fare. They left family, friends, and.
INTRO TO GILDED AGE & PROGRESSIVE ERA
Political Reforms Objective: The student will describe the significance of progressive reforms such as the initiative, recall, and referendum; direct election.
Ch. 20, Section 3 Life in Cities
What problems existed in the Gilded Age?
How the Other Half Lives, a photo essay by Jacob Riis
Term Definition 1. Progressive Era
Immigration & Urbanization.
An Immigrant’s Journey to America
The Progressive Movement
9-6 How the Other Half Lives Urbanization and Immigration
Good afternoon! Please get out any notes you have taken over the last few days and be prepared for a short quiz. Quiz Party!
Urbanization & Social Reforms in the Gilded Age
Immigrants & the Cities
DO NOW Page 469 in text book Geography skill-builder #’s 1 and 2.
Mrs. Housenick US History 10/8/12
The Industrial Revolution
Essential Question: How did problems in the Gilded Age contribute to “progressive” reforms in the early 20th century?
What problems existed in the Gilded Age?
Progressivism Chapter 17.
Life in America for Immigrants
Life in America for Immigrants
Industrialism and Response
Good afternoon! Please get out your Major Themes sheet and your notes.
More than 13.5 Million Immigrants came to the United States
The Experience of Ellis Island.
Nativism Someone who does not like immigrants because they may change the culture of their country Fear an increase in cultural diversity/favor a homogenous.
Social Reforms.
Starter 1: What do you consider to be the top 3 problems that America faces today? What can be done to confront and fix these problems? What role do normal.
Problems in the Cities Whole families tended to work because wages were low and no one person could earn enough to support the whole family. Women & children.
End Four Minutes First Four Chart Date & label your work
End Four Minutes First Four Chart Date & label your work
Good morning! Please get out your Major Themes sheet and your notes.
Word of the day: Progressivism
Life in America for Immigrants
Cities The Rise.
Progressive Reforms.
Immigration and Urbanization
How the Other Half Lives, a photo essay by Jacob Riis
How the Other Half Lives, a photo essay by Jacob Riis
Presentation transcript:

9-6 How the Other Half Lives Urbanization and Immigration

Warm up: Spiral Review 1) Warm Up After looking at and reading about working conditions yesterday, why do you think people put up with them on a daily basis? If someone was to “speak up” what do you think was done about it?

Tenement Tour 2) Tenement A tenement was a run-down and often overcrowded apartment house, especially in a poor section of a large city. Take a virtual tour of a tenement house: http://www.tenement.org/Virtual_Tour/index_virtual.html

Jacob Riis was a Danish-born muckraker who sought to improve the lives of the poor in New York City. 3) Define! Wait… What in the heck is a muckraker? Help Jacob Riis, define muckraker!

How the Other Half Lives, By Jacob Riis This photograph shows conditions in the back alleys of a tenement, where clotheslines hung.

How the Other Half Lives, By Jacob Riis A blind beggar sells cigars on the street, hoping to make enough money to pay for a meal and a bed.

How the Other Half Lives, By Jacob Riis This photograph shows children moving trash one wheelbarrow at a time – exposing child labor.

These children are sleeping outdoors – huddled together for warmth. How the Other Half Lives, By Jacob Riis These children are sleeping outdoors – huddled together for warmth.

How does this passage make you feel? 4) Stop and Jot! How does this passage make you feel? …Bodies of drowned children turn up in the rivers right along in summer whom no one seems to know anything about. When last spring some workmen, while moving a pile of lumber on a North River pier, found under the last plank the body of a little lad crushed to death, no one had missed a boy, though his parents afterward turned up…

How the Other Half Lives, By Jacob Riis The poor were frequently found drunk or ill to the point of death on the streets. Freezing to death was entirely possible.

How the Other Half Lives, By Jacob Riis Many impoverished citizens of New York shared shanties like these, squatting on the land in back alleys.

How the Other Half Lives, By Jacob Riis The immigrant family above is pictured with all of the family’s possessions.

This photograph shows the Men’s Lodging Station on 47th Street. How the Other Half Lives, By Jacob Riis This photograph shows the Men’s Lodging Station on 47th Street.

How the Other Half Lives, By Jacob Riis Garment workers might work 14 to 16 hours a day, being paid by the piece – and not very well, often working in their own tenements…

How the Other Half Lives, By Jacob Riis This man is spreading his sleeping tic on top of two barrels – the basement will very likely flood.

How the Other Half Lives, By Jacob Riis Frequently, low paid workers would try to save money by sharing a room. Overcrowding bred disease.

How the Other Half Lives, By Jacob Riis Riis asked his readers to consider: Does the poor baby in this photograph inherit justice and equality? Or does the United States need to take action to insure that working people can provide for the basic needs of their families?

The Effects of Jacob Riis’ How the Other Half Lives Riis’ work brought attention to the conditions in which poor workers and immigrants lived in New York City and other major cities across America. The emphasis Riis put on ending child labor and improving public schools in America helped reformers like Horace Mann establish public schools and helped labor unions to end child labor. Riis’ work inspired members of the settlement house movement, like Jane Addams, the founder of Hull House. The 16th Amendment to the Constitution, which created a graduated income tax system was adopted when Americans became increasingly aware of the disparity between the wealth and the very poor. 5) 1st Person! How would you respond to seeing these photos if you were alive at that time, would you do anything about it?

The Mansions of the Gilded Age

Breakers Mansion (Vanderbilt’s summer home): Newport, Rhode Island

Clayton (Frick House): Pittsburgh, PA

Ventfort Hall: Lenox, Massachusetts (owned by sister of JP Morgan)

Winchester “Mystery House” San Jose, California

Winchester “Mystery House” San Jose, California

Biltmore Estate: Asheville, North Carolina

Biltmore Estate: Asheville, North Carolina

Complete on goformative.com! Compare and Contrast 6) Venn Diagram! Complete on goformative.com!

Mission US: A City of Immigrants Sign up for an account. Use your user ID and password for the chromebook. You will play the game and make choices as an immigrant. See where you end up! http://www.pbslearningmedia.org/resource/mu10.vk8soc.7-8.newnation.cityim/mission-us-city-of-immigrants/ Note that the Statue of Liberty is not on Ellis Island! 7)What result? Ellis Island