Chapter 7, Section 1 The New Immigrants

1. Through the “Golden Door”

Many immigrants are lured by the _____________________; others temporary jobs

Europeans

· 1870–1920, about ______________________Europeans arrive in U.S.

· Many flee ________________________ persecution: Jews driven from Russia by __________________.

· Population growth results in lack of farmland, industrial jobs

· Reform movements, revolts influence young who seek independent lives

Chinese and Japanese

· About _____________ Chinese arrive; first attracted by gold rush

- types of work performed by Chinese people during this time:

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· Japanese work on ___________________ plantations, and then go to West Coast.

- by 1920, more than 200,000 lived on West Coast, why?_________________________

The West Indies and Mexico

· Between 1880 and 1920 about 260,000 immigrants arrive from the West Indies. Why?__________________________________________________________

· Mexicans immigrate to the United States during this time also. Why? _____________________________________________________________

How many come?__________________________________________________

2. Life in the New Land

A Difficult Journey

· How did most immigrants get to the United States?_____________________________

· How long did the journey take? __________________________________

· What was the cheapest way to travel?____________________________________

Ellis Island

?What is Ellis Island?___________________________________________________

Where is it located?__________________________________________________

?What were the legal requirements for entering the U.S. at Ellis Island?_____________________

_____________________________________________________________________________

?Between 1892–1924, about _________________ immigrants processed at Ellis Island.

Angel Island

?What is Angel Island? ________________________________________________

Where is it located?__________________________________________

?Between 1910 and 1940 about ___________________ Chinese immigrants entered the U.S. through Angel Island.

· Compare Angel Island to Ellis Island:

Cooperation for Survival

· Challenges immigrants faced after moving to the U.S.

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· Many seek people who share cultural values, religion, language

- ethnic communities form

Friction develops between “hyphenated” Americans, native-born

3. Immigration Restrictions

The Rise of Nativism

? A mixture of people in the U.S. blended together by abandoning their native culture is thought

of as a __________________________________________.

-however, many new immigrants don’t want to give up cultural identity

? _____________________________—is the overt favoritism toward native-born Americans.

? Nativists believe that ________________ are superior to other ethnic groups.

? Some people object to immigrants’ religion: many are Catholics, Jews.

? 1897, Congress passes literacy bill for immigrants; President _____________________vetoes.

- 1917, similar bill passes over President Wilson’s veto.

Anti-Asian Sentiment

? Nativism finds foothold in labor movement, especially in the ____________________.

- fear Chinese immigrants who work for less

? __________________ groups exert political pressure to restrict Asian immigration.

? 1882, the___________________________________________ bans entry to most Chinese.

The Gentlemen’s Agreement

? Nativist fears extend to Japanese, most Asians in early 1900s

- San Francisco segregates _________________________ schoolchildren.

? Gentlemen’s Agreement—Japan limits emigration /Why?_____________________________

Chapter 7, Section 2 The Challenges of Urbanization

Who is Jacob Riis? ________________________________________________________________

1. Urban Opportunities

Immigrants Settle in Cities

? Define urbanization- __________________________________________________

? Why did most of the immigrants settle in cities? -

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? The Americanization movement was designed to __________________________________________

____________________________________________________________________________________.

? Schools, voluntary groups teach immigrants skills needed for ___________________________,

-name the 5 courses listed in your text that were used to help newcomers learn the ways of the

native-born Americans.

? Ethnic communities provide __________________________________ of other immigrants from

the same country.

Migration from Country to City

? Farm technology decreases need for laborers; people move to cities

-name the 2 inventions mentioned that made farming more efficient:

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? Many African Americans in South lose their livelihood

? 1890–1910, about ____________________ African Americans move to cities in North and the West to escape racial violence.

? Many find conditions only slightly better than what they left behind. They find that

____________________ and___________________________ were often reality in Northern cities too.

? Competition for jobs between blacks, white immigrants causes further racial tension.

2. Urban Problems

Housing

? Housing options for working-class families -

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? What is a row house? ____________________________________________________________

? What is a tenement? ____________________________________________________________

Transportation

? What is mass transit? ____________________________________________________________

? List examples of mass transit.______________________________________________________

· Links cities to the suburbs.

Water

? 1860s cities have inadequate or no piped water, indoor plumbing rare.

? Filtration introduced 1870s, chlorination in 1908.

Sanitation

? Streets: manure, open gutters, factory smoke, poor trash collection

? Contractors called ______________________ are hired to sweep streets, collect garbage, clean outhouses

- often do not do job properly

? By 1900, cities develop sewer lines, create sanitation departments

Crime

? As population grows, thieves flourish

? New York organized the first full-time, salaried _____________________ in 1844, it was too small to be effective.

Fire

? Limited water supply contributed to another menace the _______________________________.

? Other fire hazards: wood houses, candles, kerosene heaters

? Most firefighters volunteers, not always available

? 1900, most cities have full-time, __________________________________fire department.s

? Fire sprinklers, non-flammable building materials make cities safer

3. Reformers Mobilize

The Settlement House Movement

? Social welfare reformers work to relieve urban poverty

? An early reform program,_____________________________________—preaches salvation

through service to poor.

? What are Settlement houses?____________________________________________________

? Who ran the settlement houses?__________________________________________________

· What types of services did the settlement houses provide?

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? _________________________________ founds Hull House with Ellen Gates Starr in 1889.

· _________________________________founds the first settlement house for African Americans in 1890.

Chapter 7, Section 3 Politics in the Gilded Age

1. The Emergence of Political Machines

The Political Machine

? What is a political machine?____________________________________________

? Give services to voters and businesses for political or financial support.

? After Civil War, machines gain control of major cities

? The machine was organized like a ________________________. Precinct captains, ward bosses,

and the city boss worked together to elect their candidate and guarantee the success of the

machine.

The Role of the Political Boss

? Whether or not the city boss serves as mayor, he still managed to get the job done.

(list the jobs he was able to accomplish)

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? Bosses paid by ____________________________________, get voters’ loyalty, extend influence.

Immigrants and the Machine

? Many precinct captains and political bosses were ____________________________________.

? Was is naturalization?___________________________________________________________

2 . Municipal Graft and Scandal

Election Fraud and Graft

? Some political machines used _________________________ to win elections.

? What is Graft ?—________________________________________________________________

? What is a kickback?_____________________________________________________________

· How did the political bosses control the police?________________________________________

The Tweed Ring Scandal

? 1868 William M. Tweed, aka ______________________________, heads Tammany Hall in NYC

· What is Tammany Hall?___________________________________________________________

? What is Tweed’s job?_____________________________________________________________

? Political Cartoonist, ______________________________________helps arouse public outrage

- Tweed Ring broken in 1871

3. Civil Service Replaces Patronage

Patronage Spurs Reform

? What is Patronag e?______________________________________________________________

? What is Civil service ?_____________________________________________________________

· What is the argument about civil service jobs?_________________________________________

Reform Under Hayes, Garfield, and Arthur

? Republican ____________________________________________ was elected president in 1876

-he could not convince Congress to support reform, so he used other means. Name some:

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? 1880, Republican independent __________________________________________ wins election

? Stalwart ___________________________________________________ is vice-president

? ____________________________________ gives patronage jobs to reformers; is shot and killed

? As president, Arthur urges Congress to pass civil service law

? What is the Pendleton Civil Service Act ?_____________________________________________

Business Buys Influence

Harrison, Cleveland, and High Tariffs

? _____________________________wants high tariffs; _______________________ want low tariffs

? 1884, Democrat ___________________________________________ wins; cannot lower tariffs

? 1888, ________________________________________________ becomes president, supports higher tariffs

- wins passage of McKinley Tariff Act

? 1892, ______________________________________reelected, supports bill that lowers McKinley Tariff

- rejects bill that also creates income tax

- Wilson-Gorman Tariff becomes law 1894

? 1897, William McKinley becomes president, raises tariffs again