Good afternoon! Please get out any notes you have taken over the last few days and be prepared for a short quiz. Quiz Party!

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Goal 5 Terms Hosted by Mrs. Chavers Goal 5 Pendleton Act Law that officially dismantled the spoils system and created a system of examinations to determine.
Advertisements

Immigration and Progressive Era Study Guide
Post Reconstruction to Theodore Roosevelt Unit 5 RUSH.
Chapter 2: Industrialization and Immigration, 1860–1914
Mr. Ermer U.S. History Miami Beach Senior High.  Examine the social, political, and economic causes, course, and consequences of the Second Industrial.
#3 - Do now: What messages does this cartoon want to convey?
Immigration to Urbanization
5 minutes to complete American Spirit P Study the four different interpretations of the Statue of Liberty. Briefly explain which is the most accurate.
 By 1900 majority of immigrants were from eastern and southern Europe  Push – Pull factors  The Atlantic voyage - steerage.
Short Answer What are the major characteristics that define the Gilded Age as a historical era? Explain your answer using specific examples.
Industrialization, Immigration, and Urban Life. Immigration Writing Part 1: Research 4 aspects of immigration. Keep notes on your research as you will.
SSUSH 12 The student will analyze important consequences of American industrial growth. Describe Ellis Island, the change in immigrants’ origins to southern.
What were working conditions like in factories? Why did child labor exist during the 19 th century?
Gilded Age CH. 10 Immigration, urbanization,. Immigration Europeans flood into the US in late 19 th century – Italians. Greeks, poles Russian Eastern.
Strikes and Unions Solving the issues of low pay, bad working conditions and unfair treatment of workers.
Industrial, Urbanization and Immigration. Connections How are the following terms connected? What other connections can you make between terms that your.
Industrialization and Immigration
TOPIC 2: Industry and Immigration ( )
The Rise of American Business
Immigration to Urbanization
Industrialization and Immigration
LABOR UNIONS AND POLITICAL MACHINES
Gilded Age
Chapter Vocab Words Chinese Exclusion Act Urbanization Tenement
The Gilded Age “It could be shown by facts and figures that there is no distinct Native American criminal class except Congress” ~Mark Twain.
First Four 2/9/17 Organize the following into categories
Social Studies Unit 3: “Big Business and Big Cities”
Immigrants and Urbanization
Immigration and Urbanization
Good after-lunch! Choose wisely where you sit. Groups of 2-3.
End Four Minutes First Four Chart
The Labor Movement Unions and Strikes “We’re not gonna take it, no we ain’t gonna take it. We’re not gonna take it anymore.”
New Immigration and Urbanization
Good afternoon! Please get out your Major Themes sheet, your notes, and your First Four work. Be prepared to respond to the questions on the next slide.
Good afternoon! Please get out your Major Themes sheet, your notes, and your First Four work. Be prepared to respond to the questions on the next slide.
Essential Question: How did workers & the U.S. government respond to the rapid changes of industrialization during the Gilded Age? Warm-Up Question:
TERM DEFINITION 1. Gilded Age
The Industrial Workers
End Four Minutes First Four Chart Date & label your work
Industrialization Labor Reactions.
First Four 2/9/17 Organize the following into categories
End Four Minutes First Four Chart Date & label your work
1) Summarize the artist’s point of view.
End Four Minutes First Four Chart Date & label your work
Unsafe living conditions
THE GILDED AGE: Immigration and Urbanization VISUAL VOCABULARY
Good afternoon! Please get out your Major Themes sheet and your notes.
Warm Up Write this question AND your answer on your Warm Up paper
Workers Wednesday, Oct. 1st
Immigrants and Urbanization
Workers Wednesday, Oct. 1st
Good morning! Please find your new crowd.
Industrialization, and Immigration
Industrialization, Immigration, Urbanization Ch. 4/Ch. 5/ Ch. 7 Sec. 2
End Four Minutes First Four Chart Date & label your work
Industrialization and Immigration
From the colonial era to 1880, most immigrants came from England, Ireland, or Germany in Northern Europe Between 1880 and 1921, 70% of all immigrants.
End Four Minutes First Four Chart Date & label your work
End Four Minutes First Four Chart Date & label your work
End Four Minutes First Four Chart Date & label your work
Period 6: the gilded age
End Four Minutes First Four Chart Date & label your work
Progressive Era U.S. 9- U.S. 20; What were the goals and achievements of the Progressive Era?
Good morning! Please get out your Major Themes sheet and your notes.
The US Grows Jeopardy Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $200 Q $200
Learning Objectives WXT 1.0 Explain how different labor systems developed in North America and the United States, and explain their effects on workers’
Immigration Ellis Island Angel Island
Politics, Immigration, & Urban Life
2A Good Morning! Find your new crowd…
LABOR UNIONS/IMMIGRATION
Presentation transcript:

Good afternoon! Please get out any notes you have taken over the last few days and be prepared for a short quiz. Quiz Party!

The Gilded Age & The Progressive Era Unit Questions: What is the cost of progress? What do we value?

GQ #2 - How great were the economic and social consequences of rapid industrialization in the late nineteenth century? Read “The Impact of Mechanization.” What are the changes? How were “common” people involved? How did they respond?

Business vs. Labor

Business vs. Labor Businesses making big $$$ Technology & inventions Unfair practices Effects Economic boom for some Many people exploited

Working Conditions Low Pay Long hours Unsafe conditions 1899: men $498/yr, women $267 Carnegie: $23 Million - Disparity of Wealth Long hours 12-14 hrs – 6-7 days a week Unsafe conditions 1882: 675 killed per week

Working Conditions Child Labor No benefits Sweatshops - unsafe Triangle Shirtwaist Co. 1911 146 killed

Labor Unions Goals Tactics AFL – Samuel Gompers Industrial Workers of the World “Big Bill” Haywood Advocated Socialism Contrast with “bread & butter unionism”

Reaction to Unions Business? Government? Violent Strikes Haymarket Square – 1886 Public opinion? Sherman Antitrust Act used against them Homestead Strike 1892 Pullman Strike 1894

Effects of Unions Pro-business environment hurt them Still around today Many reforms brought by unions

Quiz 1.What was the average pay for women in 1899 ? 2. How many people were killed per week in factories in 1882? 3. Why did 146 people die at the Triangle Shirtwaist Company? 4. Who was Samuel Gompers? 5. Public opinion turned against unions after what incident in 1877?

End Four Minutes First Four Chart Date & label your work 2/15/17 “Cartoon” What do you see? What is the message? Cartoon on Next Slide Keep this with all of your other First Four work. To change the timings of this timer, you need to enter the animation settings, and change the timings for the Isosceles Triangles. There will be 2 that need changing (to the same amount) – one animates the top triangle emptying, whilst the other animates the bottom triangle filling. When you change the timings these have to entered as a number of seconds. End

What do you see? What is the message?

Immigration & Urbanization America Moves to the City

Old vs. New Immigrants (1890) Immigration 1870-1920 millions of immigrants to America – Why? (Push & Pull Factors) Old vs. New Immigrants (1890) How were they received?

Ports of Entry Ellis Island Statue of Liberty 1886 Angel Island

Problems for Immigrants Language, Religion, Culture Ethnic enclaves - Ghettos Rise of Nativism American Protective Assoc. 1887 Organized Labor Old vs. New immigrants Chinese Exclusion Act – 1882 Gentlemen’s Agreement - 1907

What made city life possible? What were the problems? Urbanization Americans & Immigrants attracted to cities – why? What made city life possible? Inventions & innovations What were the problems?

Problems of Cities Urban population skyrocketing Those with money moved Suburbs – bedroom communities Mass transit – streetcars, trolleys Effect on cities Housing Water, sanitation, crime Calls for limiting immigration

Dumbbell Tenement

Flophouses A Seven-Cent Lodging House, Pell Street

Government Help? City “Machines” Boss Tweed Effects of Machines? Tammany Hall Effects of Machines? The good & the bad?

Reform Movement Social Gospel Settlement Houses Walter Rauschenbusch Settlement Houses Jane Addams Florence Kelly Americanization Movement 1910s

Quiz 1. How were “new” immigrants different from “old” immigrants? 2. Which immigrants came through Ellis Island? 3. What is “the social gospel?” 4. What was the goal of the Americanization Movement? 5. Who was Jane Addams?

Unit 4 Assessments See Samples & Rubrics Re-write your responses.  I’ll give you back your work, you use your notes and class resources to re-write your responses.  You can earn 1/2 of your missing points back this way.  Re-study and take the test again – same format but with different questions for a grade that will replace the first grade.