IMMIGRATION, URBANIZATION, AND EVERYDAY LIFE, 1860–1900

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IMMIGRATION, URBANIZATION, AND EVERYDAY LIFE, 1860–1900 CHAPTER 19 IMMIGRATION, URBANIZATION, AND EVERYDAY LIFE, 1860–1900

The New American City Migrants and Immigrants

Asian and European Immigrants Living in the Western Hemisphere and Hawaii in 1900 Adjusting to an Urban Society Slums and Ghettos Fashionable Avenues and Suburbs

Percent of Foreign-born Whites and Native Whites of Foreign or Mixed Parentage in Total Population, by Countries, 1910 Source: D.W.Meinig, The Shaping of America—A Geographical Perspective of 500 Years of History. Yale University Press. Volume 3.

Middle and Upper-Class Society and Culture Manners and Morals The Cult of Domesticity Department Stores The Transformation of Higher Education

Working-Class Politics and Reform Political Bosses and Machine Politics Battling Poverty New Approaches to Social Reform The Moral-Purity Campaign The Social Gospel The Settlement-House Movement

Working-Class Leisure in the Immigrant City Streets, Saloons, and Boxing Matches The Rise of Professional Sports Vaudeville, Amusement Parks, and Dance Halls Ragtime

Cultures in Conflict The Genteel Tradition and Its Critics Modernism in Architecture and Painting From Victorian Lady to New Woman Public Education as an Arena of Class Conflict