Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

AMERICAN URBANIZATION Global Migration and Urban Explosion.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "AMERICAN URBANIZATION Global Migration and Urban Explosion."— Presentation transcript:

1 AMERICAN URBANIZATION Global Migration and Urban Explosion

2 Urbanization Between 1870 and 1900, eleven million people moved into America’s cities Why?

3 Give me your tired, your poor, Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, The wretched refuse of your teeming shore, Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed to me, I lift my lamp beside the golden door! Emma Lazarus, a young Jewish woman wrote in 1883 :

4 Global migration Two distinct waves of European immigration Before 1880—from northern and western Europe After 1880—from southern and eastern Europe depression in southern Italy, persecution of Jews in eastern Europe, avoidance of Russian conscription

5 Ellis Island, immigration facility, New York Harbor

6 Ellis Island

7 Immigrants at Ellis Island

8 Women

9 Examination Room

10

11

12 Advertisement to migrate

13 Anti-Immigrant

14 Calls for Immigration Restriction Many Americans saw newcomers as uneducated, backward, uncouth “blue-bloods” made unlikely alliance with organized labor to restrict immigration Ethnic competition between older immigrants

15

16 Anti-immigrant attitudes

17 Electric Street Car Development of electric street car in 1880s led to urban congestion and suburban sprawl Social segregation— those who could afford, moved to outskirts, poorest occupied city center

18 Jacob Riis How the Other Half Lives, documented the poverty, crowding and disease of New York City Had America become a plutocracy? The wealthiest 1% owned more than half of the real and personal property in the country.

19 Tenement living The poor did not share equally in the advantages of city life.

20 Structural Steel Structural Steel changed the urban environment with bridges and sky- scrapers

21 Brooklyn Bridge

22 ‘Skyscraper’

23 “Chicago School” Great Chicago Fire of 1871 demanded a new city to be built Soaring population descended on Chicago “Chicago School” a small group of professional architects designing the new, tall, buildings

24 Public works Street paving, trolley tracks, underground subway lines

25 Trolley, North First in San Jose

26 Sewers and Water mains Flush toilet, bathtubs, and lavatories in new apartments—because of improvements in city sewers and water mains.

27

28 Frederick Law Olmstead

29 Central Park New York

30 Connecticut Mill

31 Chicago home

32 America’s Need for Cheap Labor Between 1870 and 1900 industrialists drew on rural and migrant people for labor force Common laborers Skilled craftsmen Mechanization replaced workers with machines Textile mills usually employed young women New classes of managers, middle management Clerical workers Retail sales

33 Great Railroad Strike 1877

34 Knights of Labor First mass organization of America’s working class Organized regardless of skill, sex, race, or nationality, became the dominate force in labor during the 1880s Knights of Labor advocated a workers’ democracy that embraced public ownership of railroads, an income tax, equal pay for women workers, and the abolition of child labor.

35 Leonora Barry

36 AFL rival to Knights of Labor American Federation of Labor headed by Samuel Gompers His plan was to organize skilled workers and to use strikes to gain immediate objectives—higher pay and better working conditions

37 12-Hour Day Since 1840, labor had sought to end the industry standard12-hour work day, Supporters set May 1,1886 as the date for a nationwide general strike in support of eight-hour day All factions of labor movement participated in Chicago on May Day, ‘largest demonstration to date’ 45,000 workers paraded peaceful down Michigan Ave in support of eight hour work day

38 Haymarket

39 Haymarket Riot The riot killed the 8-hr workday movement Ruined the Knights of Labor Skilled workers turned to the AFL Unskilled workers were left out

40 Bosses William Marcy Tweed or “Boss Tweed” of New York Bribery and Graft to control New York politics

41 Thomas Nast cartoon

42 Tammany Hall

43

44 Lincoln Steffens

45 At Home and At Play

46 “Cult of Domesticity”

47 Household chores

48 Washing clothes

49 Idealized image

50 Domestic servants

51 Coney Island

52 World’s Columbian Exposition 1893

53 Ferris Wheel

54 “White City”

55 Displays of America’s Industries

56 Agriculture Products at the Fair

57


Download ppt "AMERICAN URBANIZATION Global Migration and Urban Explosion."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google