Chapter 25
0
1,000,000
2,000,000
3,000,000
4,000,000
5,000,000
6,000,000
1871-1880
1881-1890
1891-1900
1901-1910
1911-1920
Old
New
1,593,000181,18802,753,00926,0001,110,0001,847,0001,069,0005,780,000540,0002,928,000
Chart: Rise of Immigrants
Immigrants from Europe
Old New New New
RELIGION
BIRTHPLACE
REASONS
DESTINATION
OCCUPATION
RELIGION
BIRTHPLACE
REASONS
DESTINATION
OCCUPATION
Protestant Catholic and Jewish
North/Western Southern/Eastern EuropeEurope
Both escaping poverty, religious and political persecution
Moved to farms Moved to cities in the in the Midwest Northeast
Became farmers Unskilled workers
Protestant Catholic and Jewish
North/Western Southern/Eastern EuropeEurope
Both escaping poverty, religious and political persecution
Moved to farms Moved to cities in the in the Midwest Northeast
Became farmers Unskilled workers
Old vs New Immigrants
VI. In 1860, 1 in 6 Americans lived in cities; in 1890 it was 1 of 3.
New York – 3.5 millionChicago & Philadelphia
more than 1 millionSt. Louis, Boston, Baltimore
more than 500,000
A. Industrialization drew people to cities, which caused overcrowding and poor livingconditions.
Immigrants Settle in Cities Industrialization leads to urbanization, or growth of cities Most immigrants settle in cities; get cheap housing, factory jobs Americanization—assimilate people into main culture Schools, voluntary groups teach citizenship skills
English, American history, cooking, etiquette Ethnic communities provide social support
Migration from Country to City Farm technology decreases need for laborers; people
move to cities Many African Americans in South lose their livelihood
1890–1910, move to cities in North, West to escape racial violence
Find segregation, discrimination in North too Competition for jobs between blacks, white
immigrants causes tension
1. Transportation changed.
a. horse cars were replaced first by cable cars, then electric trolley cars.
b. Elevated trains were used in Chicago and New York.
c. Subway trains were used in New York & Boston.
d. The Brooklyn Bridge was completed in 1883.
HousingWorking-class families live in houses on outskirts or boardinghousesLater, row houses built for single familiesImmigrants take over row houses, 2–3 families per houseTenements—multifamily urban dwellings, are overcrowded, unsanitary
TransportationMass transit —move large numbers of people along fixed routesBy 20th century, transit systems link city to suburbs
D. Cities grew upward and outward
1. Skyscraper – 1st in Chicago -1885
2. Elisha Otis made elevators usable for skyscrapers.
3. Tenements were low cost housing
in cities.
a. Disease was a result of poor conditions – cholera, malaria, TB, diphtheria, typhoid
b. Great Chicago fire occurred in 1871
c. Other urban problems included: crime, violence, pollution, and alcoholism.
HousingWorking-class families live in houses on outskirts or boardinghousesLater, row houses built for single familiesImmigrants take over row houses, 2–3 families per houseTenements—multifamily urban dwellings, are overcrowded, unsanitary
TransportationMass transit —move large numbers of people along fixed routesBy 20th century, transit systems link city to 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 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
Early police forces too small to be effective Fire Fire hazards: limited water, wood houses, candles, kerosene
heaters Most firefighters volunteers, not always available 1900, most cities have full-time, professional fire departments Fire sprinklers, non-flammable building materials make cities
safer
Cities provided opportunities•Machine-made jobs
•high wages •ended monotony of the farm.
Cities provided opportunities•Machine-made jobs
•high wages •ended monotony of the farm.
Cities
Job opportunities for Women• School teaching
• Domestic service • Women doctors
• Lawyers, typists, telephone girls, librarians, journalists and social workers.
• Women gainfully employed rose from 2.5 million in 1880 to 8 million in 1910.
Job opportunities for Women• School teaching
• Domestic service • Women doctors
• Lawyers, typists, telephone girls, librarians, journalists and social workers.
• Women gainfully employed rose from 2.5 million in 1880 to 8 million in 1910.
Cities were attractive •with telephones
•bright lights and electricity. •Central heating
•public water systems• indoor plumbing•sewage disposal
•asphalt pavements and transportation.
Cities were attractive •with telephones
•bright lights and electricity. •Central heating
•public water systems• indoor plumbing•sewage disposal
•asphalt pavements and transportation.
Cities
Cities had many faces•Slums
•Criminals•Beggars•Pollution
•bad smells •grafters
(corrupt politicians)
Cities had many faces•Slums
•Criminals•Beggars•Pollution
•bad smells •grafters
(corrupt politicians) Cities
•Cities offered beautiful parks, museums, libraries, churches,
hospitals and schools.
•Became the intellectual nerve center of the country.
•Cities offered beautiful parks, museums, libraries, churches,
hospitals and schools.
•Became the intellectual nerve center of the country.
Cities
•Chicago became the main railroad junction in the U.S.•Immigrants move to Chicago because of the job opportunities
• Meatpacking• Steel mills• Cattle industry• Multi-cultural community
•Chicago became the main railroad junction in the U.S.•Immigrants move to Chicago because of the job opportunities
• Meatpacking• Steel mills• Cattle industry• Multi-cultural community
• Many American nativists disliked new immigrants because
they would not assimilate into
American society.•Would stay segregated
in their ethnic neighborhoods.
B. Before the 1880s immigrants came from western Europe. Afterwards they came from southern & eastern Europe.
1. steerage
2. They fled crop failures and famine for a better life.
3. More than 70% of all immigrants came through New York City –“The Golden Door.”
Emma Lazarus, The Poems of Emma Lazarus, vol. 1 (1889), 2
With conquering limbs astride from land to land;Here at our sea-washed, sunset gates shall stand
A mighty woman with a torch, whose flameIs the imprisoned lightning, and her nameMother of Exiles. From her beacon hand
Glows world-wide welcome; her mile eyes commandThe air-bridged harbor that twin cites frame.
"Keep, ancient lands, your storied pomp!" cries sheWith silent lips. "Give me your tired, your poor, Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed to me,
I lift my lamp beside the golden door!"
C. In 1892 Ellis Island was built in New York Harbor near the Statue of Liberty.
Ellis Island was built in 1892 as
the 1st “Immigration
Center”Later, closed in
the 1940sToday it is a
museum.
• The goal was to “screen” immigrants coming from Europe.
• Immigrants took physical examinations and were held at Ellis Island before they were released to the US mainland.
1.All immigrants had to undergo a physical examination.
2.Those found with a contagious disease were quarantined.
3. Immigrants often sought to live in communities established by previous settlers from their homelands.
American Citizens: What weight can my vote have against this flood of ignorance, stupidity and fraud?
Cartoon: Immigration• Old Immigrants resented the New Immigrants.
• New Immigrants came to this country for the same reasons as the Old Immigrants.
Immigrants being used
Cleveland quote on Immigration
• Resentment and discrimination
against the Chinese.
• First law to restrict
immigration.
• Taking away jobs from Nativists
Chinese Exclusion Act 1
Chinese Exclusion Act 2
• President Hayes vetoed this act and
Congress would override it.
• He would not be re-elected.
•Chinese immigration would be outlawed until the 1920’s.
D. The federal gov. did little to help immigrants assimilate into society, so many were often controlled by powerful “bosses” – Boss Tweed.
•Corrupt political leader put New York City in debt
Political boss•1851 elected to city council•1852 served in Congress
•Kept Democratic Party in power in NYC called Tammany Hall•Formed the Tweed Ring•Bought votes, encouraged corruption, controlled NYC politics
1. Gradually Social Gospel was preached. Lead by: preachers Walter Rauschenbusch and Washington Gladden.
•Kept detailed files on people who received their help
•Decided who was worthy of help•Wanted immigrants to adopt American, middle-class standards.
•Sought to apply the gospel teachings of Christ: charity and justice to society’s problems.
•Moved into poor communities•Their settlement houses served as community centers and social service agencies.
•Hull House, founded by Jane Addams a model settlement house in Chicago, offered cultural events, classes, childcare, employment assistance, and health-care clinics.
The Charity Organization Movement
The Social Gospel Movement
The Settlement Movement
The Settlement House Movement• Social welfare reformers work to relieve urban poverty• Social Gospel movement—preaches salvation through service
to poor• Settlement houses—community centers in slums, help
immigrants• Run by college-educated women, they:
- provide educational, cultural, social services- send visiting nurses to the sick- help with personal, job, financial problems
• Jane Addams founds Hull House with Ellen Gates Starr in 1889
2. Jane Addams, founded Hull House in 1889 to teach children and adults the skills they would need to survive and succeed in America. – Nobel Prize.
3. Florence Kelley – lifelong battler for welfare of women, children, blacks and consumers.
4. Lillian Wald founded the Henry Street Settlement house in New York. 1893
E. Churches had failed to help the poor. This changed in the late 1800s.
1.Led by Dwight L. Moody – founded Moody Bible Institute in 1889 in Chicago.
a man who proclaimed the gospel of kindness and forgiveness and adapted the old-time religion to the facts of city life.
2. Cardinal Gibbons was popular with Roman Catholics and Protestants, as he preached American unity.
3. By 1890, Americans could choose from 150 religions, including the new Salvation Army, which tried to help the poor and unfortunate.
4. The Church of Christ, Scientist (Christian Science), founded by Mary Baker Eddy, preached that Christianity heals sickness.
5. YMCA’s and YWCA’s also sprouted.
F. Darwin Disrupts the Churches – Charles Darwin – On the Origin of Species – evolution:
angered Fundamentalist.
G.Movements in black educational improvements were led by:
1. Booker T. Washington – former slave- Autobiography – Up From Slavery.
a. Founded Tuskegee Institute.
b.Believed blacks must help themselves before being given more rights.
2. One of Washington’s students was George Washington Carver, who later discovered hundreds of new uses for peanuts, sweet potatoes, and soybeans.
3. W.E.B. Du Bois, the first Black to get a Ph.D. from Harvard University
a. Niagara Movement – demanded complete equality for Blacks and action nowb. founded the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) in 1910.
H.Two journalist gave ideas on how two reform society.
1.Henry George – “Progress and Poverty.”
2.Edward Bellamy – “Looking Backward.”