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Published byJonas Wilson Modified over 9 years ago
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By: Susan M. Pojer Horace Greeley HS Chappaqua, NY
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Characteristics of Urbanization During the Gilded Age 1.Megalopolis. 2.Mass Transit. 3.Magnet for economic and social opportunities. 4.Pronounced class distinctions. - Inner & outer core 5.New frontier of opportunity for women. 6.Squalid living conditions for many. 7.Political machines. 8.Ethnic neighborhoods.
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William Le Baron Jenney 1832 – 1907 “Father of the Modern Skyscraper”
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W. Le Baron Jenney: Central Y.M.C.A., Chicago, 1891
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Louis Sullivan 1856 – 1924 The Chicago School of Architecture Form follows function!
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Louis Sullivan: Bayard Bldg., NYC, 1897
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Louis Sullivan: Carson, Pirie, Scott Dept. Store, Chicago, 1899
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D. H. Burnham 1846 – 1912 Use of steel as a super structure.
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DH Burnham: Fisher [Apt.] Bldg, Chicago, 1896
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D. H. Burnham: Marshall Fields Dept. Store, 1902
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DH Burnham: Railway Exchange, Chicago, 1904
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New York City Architectural Style: 1870s-1910s 1.The style was less innovative than in Chicago. 2.NYC was the source of the capital for Chicago. 3.Most major business firms had their headquarters in NYC their bldgs. became “logos” for their companies. 4.NYC buildings and skyscrapers were taller than in Chicago.
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Western Union Bldg,. NYC - 1875
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Manhattan Life Insurance Bldg. NYC - 1893
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Singer Building NYC - 1902
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Woolwor th Bldg. NYC - 1911
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Flatiron Building NYC – 1902 D. H. Burnham
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Grand Central Station, 1913
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John A. Roebling: The Brooklyn Bridge, 1883
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John A. Roebling: The Brooklyn Bridge, 1913
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Statue of Liberty, 1876 (Frederic Auguste Bartholdi)
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“Dumbell” Tenement
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“Dumbell “ Tenement, NYC
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Jacob Riis: How the Other Half Lived (1890)
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Tenement Slum Living
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Lodgers Huddled Together
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Mulberry Street Bend, 1889
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5-Cent Lodgings
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Men’s Lodgings
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Women’s Lodgings
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Immigrant Family Lodgings
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Blind Beggar, 1888
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Italian Rag-Picker
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1890s ”Morgue” – Basement Saloon
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”Black & Tan” Saloon
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”Bandits’ Roost”
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Mullen’s Alley ”Gang”
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The Street Was Their Playground
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Lower East Side Immigrant Family
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A Struggling Immigrant Family
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Another Struggling Immigrant Family
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Rosa Schneiderman, Garment Worker
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Child Labor
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Average Shirtwaist Worker’s Week 51 hours or less4,5545% 52-57 hours65,03379% 58-63 hours12,21115% Over 63 hours5621% Total employees, men and women 82,360
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Womens’ Trade Union League
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Women Voting for a Strike!
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Local 25 with Socialist Paper, The Call
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Social and Political Activists Clara Lemlich, Labor Organizer Carola Woerishoffer, Bryn Mawr Graduate
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Public Fear of Unions/Anarchists
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Arresting the Girl Strikers for Picketing
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Scabs Hired
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“The Shirtwaist Kings” Max Blanck and Isaac Harris
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Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Asch Building, 8 th and 10 th Floors
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Typical NYC Sweatshop, 1910
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Inside the Building After the Fire
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Most Doors Were Locked
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Crumpled Fire Escape, 26 Died
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One of the Heroes
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10 th Floor After the Fire
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Dead Bodies on the Sidewalk
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One of the “Lucky” Ones?
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Rose Schneiderman The Last Survivor
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Scene at the Morgue
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Relatives Review Bodies 145 Dead
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Page of the New York Journal
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Tenement Slum Living
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Struggling Immigrant Families
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Mulberry Street – “Little Italy”
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St. Patrick’s Cathedral
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Hester Street – Jewish Section
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Pell St. - Chinatown, NYC
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