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In the early 1900s the middle class was growing but was worried about lawless cities, a desperate poor, and an untouchable rich
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In the early 1900s the middle class was growing but was worried about lawless cities, a desperate poor, and an untouchable rich.

Mar 27, 2015

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Jenna Calhoun
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Page 1: In the early 1900s the middle class was growing but was worried about lawless cities, a desperate poor, and an untouchable rich.

In the early 1900s the middle class was growing but was worried about lawless cities, a desperate

poor, and an untouchable rich

Page 2: In the early 1900s the middle class was growing but was worried about lawless cities, a desperate poor, and an untouchable rich.

Falling prices and increased consumerism led to improved standard of living for most Americans

Urbanization meant greater access to popular entertainment and modern comforts

Industrialization meant the creation of management, clerical, and service industry jobs that were “white collar”

Most of this middle class lived in and around the cities

Page 3: In the early 1900s the middle class was growing but was worried about lawless cities, a desperate poor, and an untouchable rich.

• From 1860 to 1900 the percentage of Americans living in the cities rose from 20% to 40%

• Drawn by jobs, electricity, luxuries, anonymity

• The cities grew so quickly that overcrowding became a major problem

Page 4: In the early 1900s the middle class was growing but was worried about lawless cities, a desperate poor, and an untouchable rich.

From 1880 to 1920 about 25 million, about half as many people who lived in the country in 1880

80 percent from Southern and Eastern Europe

Most illiterate, poor, uneducated

Catholic, Jewish, Orthodox

Page 5: In the early 1900s the middle class was growing but was worried about lawless cities, a desperate poor, and an untouchable rich.

Crime – 6.8 homicides per 100,000 in 1920 (1.2 in 1900) (is now 5.6 per 100,000 in 2007)

Not enough police, firefighters, garbage and sewage systems

Overcrowding – apartments subdivided

Poverty

Page 6: In the early 1900s the middle class was growing but was worried about lawless cities, a desperate poor, and an untouchable rich.

Most transportation was done by horse-drawn carts generating 20 to 30 pounds of manure a day- by the 1890s replaced by electric trolleys

Most tenements had no plumbing so outhouses and cesspools were used and people threw their garbage into the streets or into alleys

Immigrants began to move near immigrants from the same country – Little Italy, Chinatown, etc. . .

Page 7: In the early 1900s the middle class was growing but was worried about lawless cities, a desperate poor, and an untouchable rich.

Political machines emerged in the cities Voters bribed by favors from ward bosses

(jobs, money, gifts) Businesses bribe officials for contracts,

favors Officials (elected or otherwise) get bribes

or use information for personal benefit

Page 8: In the early 1900s the middle class was growing but was worried about lawless cities, a desperate poor, and an untouchable rich.

The cities and their immigrant populations became associated with heavy alcohol use

Per capita consumption of alcohol in a year (in gallons)

1871-1880 – 1.721906-1910 – 2.62007 – 2.31Alcohol consumption is associated with crime,

domestic violence, indolence and vice

Page 9: In the early 1900s the middle class was growing but was worried about lawless cities, a desperate poor, and an untouchable rich.

Women’s rights in the late 1800s

If married a women would lose her right to own property, sign a contract and in some cases (teaching) has to quit their jobs

Women were encouraged to not work outside the home

Domestic violence A belief in the moral superiority of

women helped build support for granting women the right to vote

Page 11: In the early 1900s the middle class was growing but was worried about lawless cities, a desperate poor, and an untouchable rich.

A rash of mergers and buyouts concentrates ownership

Trusts are combinations of companies that dominate an industry

Large companies put smaller companies out of business with newer machines and technology

Some trusts could lower prices with new machinery, but fear of monopolies and low wages persisted

By 1910 – 2 percent of the population earned 20 percent of the nation’s income (double what it had been in 1896)