Top Banner
U.S. History Chapters 14 Cities and Immigration
12

U.S. History Chapters 14 Cities and Immigration. Immigrants form Southern and Eastern Europe Section 1.

Jan 12, 2016

Download

Documents

Malcolm McBride
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: U.S. History Chapters 14 Cities and Immigration. Immigrants form Southern and Eastern Europe Section 1.

U.S. HistoryChapters 14

Cities and Immigration

Page 2: U.S. History Chapters 14 Cities and Immigration. Immigrants form Southern and Eastern Europe Section 1.

Immigrants form Southern and Eastern Europe

Section 1

Page 3: U.S. History Chapters 14 Cities and Immigration. Immigrants form Southern and Eastern Europe Section 1.

Words to KnowGhetto: A neighborhood where people of the

same race, religion, or country live.

Tenement: An apartment house with poor safety, sanitation, and comfort conditions.

Skyscraper: A very tall building with many floors, elevators, and steel frame.

Page 4: U.S. History Chapters 14 Cities and Immigration. Immigrants form Southern and Eastern Europe Section 1.

New Immigrants1840’s-1870’s: most

came from southern and eastern Europe. GB, Ireland, Germany

“New” Immigrants 1880’s +: “New” meant they were

different than prior immigrants

Russia, Poland, Italy, and Greece

Settled in NYC, Newark, NJ, Cleve, Detroit, Chicago

Page 5: U.S. History Chapters 14 Cities and Immigration. Immigrants form Southern and Eastern Europe Section 1.

New Immigrants cont. Religions mostly:

Catholic Jewish Greek Orthodox

Most did not speak English

Used to living and working in different conditions

Saw US as a place to begin a new life Wars Violence Religious Freedom

Page 6: U.S. History Chapters 14 Cities and Immigration. Immigrants form Southern and Eastern Europe Section 1.

Coming to AmericaAfter 1892:

Landed on Ellis Island (small island by S. O. L.)

Checked for diseases Ellis Island used for the

next 60 years Records kept

Problems Language No skills No money to buy land Living in cities/working

at factories

Page 7: U.S. History Chapters 14 Cities and Immigration. Immigrants form Southern and Eastern Europe Section 1.

Changing Cities Populations exploded

Live next to one another Language Religion Customs

1870-1920: cities grew from 10m - 50m

Lived in the ghettos (separate from other parts)

Dishonest Americans cheated them: Out of money (higher

prices) Hate

Page 8: U.S. History Chapters 14 Cities and Immigration. Immigrants form Southern and Eastern Europe Section 1.

Living in CitiesRapid growth

between 1860 and 1900: Not enough places to

live Tenements set up To many people in one

living space Neighborhoods dirty

and crowded Noise Garbage Bugs/rats Led to diseases

Page 9: U.S. History Chapters 14 Cities and Immigration. Immigrants form Southern and Eastern Europe Section 1.

Unsafe WorkplacesJobs in factories

Long hoursLittle payPoor lightLittle fresh air

Page 10: U.S. History Chapters 14 Cities and Immigration. Immigrants form Southern and Eastern Europe Section 1.

Fire Always a danger in

overcrowded cities

1911: fire at Triangle Shirtwaist Co.: New York City Workers not able to leave

building quickly:Doors were locked140+ workers died:

Mostly women

Page 11: U.S. History Chapters 14 Cities and Immigration. Immigrants form Southern and Eastern Europe Section 1.

Crime Big problem for people living in

poor, crowded neighborhoods Pickpockets Gangs

Attacked and robbed people More police added, but crime rose to fast for

police to control

GOOD POINTS

Excitement/new opportunities

Public schools and colleges

Museums/libraries/theaters/shops/sports

CHANGING LANDSCAPE

Growth of steel industry and electric power Skyscrapers

Page 12: U.S. History Chapters 14 Cities and Immigration. Immigrants form Southern and Eastern Europe Section 1.

ClassworkNone