Goal 5.01: Evaluate the influence of immigration and rapid industrialization on urban life.

I.  Immigration

a.  European Immigration

i.  About 14 million immigrants from Italy, Greece, Poland, Russia, Slavic states

ii.  Many were ______, ______, or ______

iii. Came because of job and land availability, to escape religious persecution, to escape a fixed class system, and/or to live in a democracy

iv. Most arrived at ______in New York City

1.  Immigrants were medically inspected

2.  Unhealthy quarantined or sent back to Europe (only about 2% were denied entry)

v.  Opposition to immigration

1.  The ______or American Party (1849-1860)

a.  Nativists, Anti-Catholic, opposed immigration

b.  Played on prejudices and fears that immigrants would take jobs

2.  American Protective Association (1887 – 1900)

a.  Wanted to limit Catholic immigration, ban Catholics from teaching, holding public office

b.  Also wanted to make understanding English a requisite for citizenship

3.  ______of 1882

a.  $.50 tax on each immigrant entering US to help pay costs of regulating immigration

b.  Denied entry to “convicts, lunatics, idiots, and persons likely to become public charges”

b.  Chinese Immigration: looking to escape famine, unemployment, and violent rebellions

i.  Often excluded from regular American society, so developed their own in “______”

ii.  Many arrived at ______in San Francisco where 75% of Asian immigrants were detained for at least 2 weeks, some for up to 2 years

iii. Opposition to immigration

1.  Workingman’s Party of California (1870s – 1900)

a.  Opposed Chinese immigration and use of Chinese labor to build railroads

2.  ______Acts

a.  Passed in 1882, renewed in 1892 & 1902, repealed in 1942

b.  Banned Chinese immigration for 10 years

c.  Chinese already here could not become citizens

c.  Ethnic Neighborhoods

i.  Immigrants preferred to stick together, form neighborhoods where it was safe to speak native language, continue ethnic customs, practice their religion

ii.  These neighborhoods led to general distrust of immigrants by the native US population

iii. Which is the US?

1.  ______= assimilation of multiple cultures into a new, blended “American” culture

2.  ______= many different cultures thrown together, but little blending – each culture stands out

II.  Urbanization: Between 1870 -1900: US urban population soared from 10 million to 30 million

a.  Immigrants tended to stay in cities, poor farmers & freed slaves migrated to northern cities to seek new opportunities

b.  Appeal of cities

i.  More jobs available

ii.  Modern utilities, such as electric lighting, running water, and sewer systems

iii. Entertainment

1.  ______: collection of acts, including dancers, singers, acrobats, comedians, etc. (similar to “America’s Got Talent” but without judges)

2.  ______: large venues with live bands playing dance music

3.  ______: bars or nightclubs which offered musical entertainment

4.  ______: neighborhood bars where working men ate, drank, talked politics and discussed current events

5.  Amusement Parks: NYC’s ______became a resort area after Civil War, first “attraction” was a carousel that opened in 1876

6.  Spectator sports: Boxing, horse racing, wrestling, professional ______

c.  Skyscrapers

i.  As cities became more crowded, space became more valuable

ii.  Inventions like high-quality ______and the Otis ______made going higher the most practical solution

iii. Chicago architect Louis Sullivan generally credited with pioneering the “skyscraper”

iv. Home Insurance Building, Chicago (1885) First steel-framed skyscraper; 10 stories tall

d.  Public Parks

i.  ______(1822 – 1903): Designed many major urban green-spaces, including Central Park in NYC

e.  Mass Transit

i.  ______: railroad car pulled along tracks by horses

ii.  ______: railroad car pulled along tracks by underground cables (San Francisco, 1873)

iii. Electric ______car: developed in 1887 by Frank J. Sprague, first used in Richmond, VA

iv. Elevated railroads: Used in ______starting in 1892

v.  ______: Boston in 1897, NYC in 1904

vi. Major bridges, such as NYC’s ______(1883)

f.  Shopping

i.  Bold new forms of advertising products, using large, illustrated ads in newspapers & magazines

ii.  ______stores: John Wannamaker’s Grand Depot in Philadelphia

iii. ______stores: Woolworth’s (1879)

iv. ______: Montgomery Ward, Sears Roebuck

g.  Social Structure

i.  Upper Class or “High Society”

1.  Wealthiest families, primarily industrialists like the Rockefellers and Vanderbilts

2.  Built palatial houses, clustered in downtown districts

ii.  Middle Class

1.  Doctors, lawyers, engineers, architects, managers, teachers

2.  Lived in “streetcar suburbs” on edges of cities

iii. Working Class

1.  75% of urban population

2.  Lived in tenement housing within easy walking distance of the industrial district

h.  Urban Problems

i.  Violent crime

ii.  Pollution: especially of drinking water, but also of land and air

iii. Disease: cholera, typhoid

iv. Fire: Chicago (1871), Boston (1872), Baltimore (1904), San Francisco (1906, caused by an earthquake)

v.  ______Buildings

1.  Small, extremely crowded apartment buildings

2.  Whole families often lived in just one room, sometimes with only a single window for air

3.  Up to a dozen families might share a single bathroom

4.  Buildings were unsafe – hard to escape in a fire, little fresh air and close quarters led to spread of disease

vi. Social Reformers

1.  ______(1849 – 1914)

a.  Danish immigrant, social reformer, journalist, photographer

b.  Wrote How the Other Half Lives (1890)

c.  Documented horrors of life in the slums & tenements

2.  ______(1860 – 1935)

a.  First woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize

b.  Promoted the “______”: idea that Christians have a moral responsibility to fix society’s problems

c.  Founded ______, a settlement house in Chicago

i.  Settlement Houses: Middle class “settlers” moved into working class neighborhoods to help provide education, meals, childcare, medical care, and general advice to immigrants and poor workers