AMERICA MOVES TO THE CITY: Urban Frontier New Immigration Social Reforms
The Urban Frontier L.A. 1850: 1, : 107,000 New York 1850: 682, : 4.2 mill Chicago 1850: 29, : 1.7 mill
Forging the City Streetcars and autos would replace horse and buggy Compact “walking cities” gave way to megacities Specialized districts were created to separate businesses, industry and residencies Industrial jobs drew people by the thousands Electric elevator made skyscrapers possible Engineering ingenuity made cities more glamorous and enticing Lower Broadway, 1875
Department Stores (Marshall Field’s in Chicago, Macy’s in NYC): Attracted middle-class shoppers; provided jobs; ushered in new era of Consumerism Created a culture of waste, boxes, bags, bottles needed to be tossed Clothing became trendy w/ new styles outdating previous clothes worn The Urban Age had dawned…
Problems Associated with Urbanization: Crime flourished Safety standards were non-existent Sanitation couldn’t keep up Impure water, uncollected garbage, unwashed bodies led to city stench Poor beggars contradicted shiny new styles and wealth Slums grew more crowded with the poor and unemployed Jacob Riis: How the Other Half LivesHow the Other Half Lives
Assimilation tough for immigrants Federal Gov’t did almost nothing to help immigrants assimilate into American society City gov’ts overwhelmed by the size and scope of growth didn’t do much Unofficial ‘governments’ of urban machines helped with assimilation Big Bosses traded jobs and services for votes Big Bosses provided homes, jobs and food for the votes Bosses helped get hospitals and schools built in poor neighborhoods Nations’ conscience did finally take note: Jane Addams, prosperous Illinois family and college-educated founded the Hull House in Chicago Offered instruction in English, counseling for new immigrants, child-care services and cultural activities Settlement Houses founded in other cities in US became centers of social activism
Looking Backward, 1893
The South lagged behind the North in education: 44% of non- whites were illiterate (1990) Jim Crow Laws still made it difficult to partake equally in society Booker T. Washington (ex-slave) founded the Black Normal and Industrial School at Tuskegee, Alabama Black students were taught useful trades; self- respect and economic security Criticized for not demanding equality He accepted segregation and worked diligently to provide his students with a sense of economic independence and self-worth w/in the situation they found themselves in
W. E. B. du Bois Criticized Booker T. Washington for rolling over on social equality Earned a Ph.D. from Harvard Demanded social equality and economic equality for blacks Help found the NAACP in 1909 Rejected ‘Gradualism’ He argued that blacks should be given full equality in the mainstream of society “It is a peculiar sensation, this double consciousness, this sense of always looking at one’s self through the eyes of others… One ever feels his two-ness- an American, a Negro; two souls, two thoughts, two reconciled strivings; two warring ideals in one dark body, whose dogged strength alone keeps it from being torn asunder” - W.E.B. du Bois, The Souls of Black Folk