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Immigration-Part 2 Early 1900s- 60% of major cities were immigrants
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1892- reception center opened for immigrants on ___ ____ in NYC Angel Island in San Fransisco
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Physical exam upon arrival Check for tuberculosis, trachoma Some were quarantined (def) After handing over documents, they headed off to find relatives Criminals hung around ports
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Some settled in NYC Others moved to Buffalo, Cleveland, Detroit, Milwaukee and Chicago.
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people often settled in neighborhoods with other immigrants from same nation (Chinatown in NY or San Fran; Little Italy in Cleveland; Irish sections of Chicago or Boston) Maintain language, food, customs, other culture
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Chinatown, NYC- 1909
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Columbus Park, NYC (Chinatown)
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Next day
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Challenges of Cities Transportation improvements led to development of suburbs (residential areas surrounding larger cities) Cable cars, followed by elevated trains and then subways
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Philadelphia
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1853- Elisha Otis invented _______-
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Otis
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1895
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Urban living conditions Tenements- low cost apartment buildings housing urban poor Extremely crowded conditions Little fire protection Chicago Fire of 1871- 18,000 buildings, 250 dead, $200 million damages (=$2 billion today!)
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Chicago Fire (started in a shed? By a cow?)
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Diseases such as cholera, tb, diphtheria, typhoid fever rampant Spread rapidly in close quarters
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Jacob Riis- How the Other Half Lives- book exposing horrors of tenement life Leads to first laws restricting tenement life
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(next day!)
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Political Problems in Cities Increased pressure on city officials Fire Protection Transportation Sewage Electric and Water service
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Political Machine Unofficial organization designed to keep a particular party in power “Political Boss” Favors for votes: Jobs, money, contracts
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Helped poor-in turn they supported them Then stole from the taxpayers! Graft- use of one’s job to gain profit Padded bills, false receipts, bill for work not done
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William “Boss” Tweed Tammany Hall- political club that ran NYC Get candidates in, then steal!
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The corruption was breathtaking in its breadth and boldness. A carpenter was paid $360,751 (roughly $4.9 million today) for one month's labor in a building with very little woodwork. A furniture contractor received $179,729 ($2.5 million) for three tables and 40 chairs. And the plasterer, A tammy functionary, Andrew J. Garvey, got $133,187 ($1.82 million) for two days' work; his business acumen earned him the sobriquet "The Prince of Plasterers." Tweed personally profited from a financial interest in a Massachusetts quarry that provided the courthouse's marble. When a committee investigated why it took so long to build the courthouse, it spent $7,718 ($105,000) to print its report. The printing company was owned by Tweed.
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Boss Tweed
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Tammany Hall
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Thomas Nast Cartoon
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