1302_010_a the gilded age - the rise of urban america (1)
TRANSCRIPT
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The Gilded Age
The Rise of Urban America
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The Growth of Cities
In 1860, only 16 cities had populations over 50,000By 1890:
11 cities had populations over 250,000Chicago and Philadelphia were over 1,000,000New York approaching 3,500,000One in three Americans lived in a city
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Emergence of Cities - 1880
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Emergence of Cities - 1920
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Patterns of Urban GrowthTraditional – New York
Mixed use neighborhoods – all classes presentIndustryCommercialResidential
Dictated by limited/expensive intercity transportRing and Center – Chicago
Industrial, commercial, residential areas segregatedIndustry & commerce on spokesResidential filled in between the spokes
Residential filled three distinct ringsInner ring, truly poorMiddle ring, working classOuter ring, middle class
Rich carved out their own enclaves (Nob Hill in Boston; Highland Park in Dallas)
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Street Scenes
New York – 1914 Chicago - 1906
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Factors Driving Immigration
Discontent with situation in EuropePolitical, economic, social
Encouragement by U.S. interestsRailroads & industryStates & Territories
The “American Dream”2nd Industrial revolution was strongest drawPromise of opportunity
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Three Distinct Waves of Immigration
Wave 1 (1815-1860)5,000,000Britain & Ireland
Wave 2 (1860-1890)10,000,000Germany, Scandinavia, Switzerland, Holland
Wave 3 (1890-1914)15,000,000Italy, Greece, Austria-Hungary, Russia, Rumania, Turkey
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Immigrants Arriving in New York - 1906
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Problems of Urban Growth
Overcrowding Disease Backlash, social unrest Class conflict Pressure on city/government services
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The “Teeming Masses”1890 population density (New York)
NYC - 60.08/acreManhattan - 114.53/acre10th ward - 522.0/acre
1890 population density (New York)NYC - 38,451/sq.mileManhattan - 73,299/aq. mile10th ward - 334,080/sq. mile
Number of persons per dwellingNYC (1880) 16.37London (1881) 7.9Boston (1880) 8.26
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NativismAnti-immigration sentiments are typically justified with one or more of the following arguments, claiming that immigrants:
Language: Isolate themselves in their own communities and refuse to learn the local language. Employment: “Steal” jobs from native citizens. Nationalism: Damage a sense of community and nationality. Consumption: Increase the consumption of scarce resources. Welfare: Make heavy use of social welfare systems. Overpopulation: May sometimes overpopulate countries Ethnicity: Can swamp a native population and replace its culture with their own.