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Semelhante a Chapter 20 (20)
Chapter 20
- 1. Chapter 20:
The Rise of an Urban
Order, 1870-1914
Experience History
DAVIDSON • GIENAPP • HEYRMAN • LYTLE • STOFF
© 2011 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
- 2. 2
Preview
“By the late nineteenth century, the country was
in the midst of an urban explosion. Industrial
cities of unparalleled size and diversity were
transforming American life. They lured people
from all over the globe, created tensions
between natives and newcomers, reshaped the
social order. …For so many Americans, a new
urban age was dawning. The golden door of
opportunity opened onto the city.”
© 2011 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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The Highlights
A New Urban Age
Running and Reforming the City
City Life
City Culture
© 2011 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
- 4. 4
A New Urban Age
The Urban Explosion
– Cities’ relations to regions around them shaped
natural and economic environments
The Great Global Migration
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Push and pull factors
Chinese immigrants
The “new” immigration from southern and eastern
Europe in the 1880s
© 2011 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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Holding the City Together
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Patterns of settlement
Suburban homes
Role of electricity
Mass transit freed the middle class and poor to live
miles from work
Bridges and Skyscrapers
– Suspension bridges
– Cloudscrapers: open floors ideal for warehouses,
office buildings, and department stores
© 2011 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
- 7. 7
© 2011 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
- 8. 8
The Urban Environment: Slum and Tenement
– Perils of the slum neighborhood
– Dumbbell tenement spread “like a scab”
“Far below the skyscrapers lay the slums and
tenements of the inner city. In cramped rooms and
sunless hallways, along narrow alleys and in
flooded basements lived the city’s poor.”
© 2011 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
- 9. 9
Running and Reforming the City
Boss Rule
– The boss as entrepreneur
– A crude welfare system
Rewards, Costs, and Accomplishments
– Boss William Tweed and Tammany Hall
– Bosses guided immigrants and helped
underprivileged up from poverty
– Toll was often outrageous
© 2011 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
- 10. 10
Nativism, Revivals, and the Social Gospel
– Nativism: a defensive and fearful nationalism
– Chinese Exclusion Act (1882): banned the entry of
Chinese laborers
– Social Gospel: focused on improving the conditions of
society
The Social Settlement Movement
– The settlement house
– Lobbied for social legislation to improve housing,
women’s working conditions, and public schools
© 2011 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
- 11. 11
© 2011 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
- 12. 12
City Life
The Immigrant in the City
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Ethnic neighborhoods
Adapting to America
Family life
Special situation of the Chinese
Assimilation
Urban Middle-Class Life
– The home as haven and status symbol
– The middle-class homemaker
© 2011 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
- 13. 13
Victorianism and the Pursuit of Virtue
– Woman’s Christian Temperance Union
– Comstock Law (1873) fought pornography
Challenges to Convention
– Victoria Woodhull
– Urban homosexual communities
“Middle-class life reflected a code of behavior called
Victorianism, named for Britain’s long-reigning
Queen Victoria (1837-1901). It emerged in the 1830s
and 1840s as part of an effort to tame the turbulent
urban-industrial society developing in Europe.”
© 2011 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
- 14. 14
City Culture
Public Education in an Urban Industrial World
– 1870-1900: an educational awakening occurred
– Schools taught conformity and values in addition to
reading, writing, and arithmetic
Higher Learning and the Rise of the Professional
– Postgraduate education
– Black colleges; professional schools
Higher Education for Women
– By 1910, 40 percent of college students were women
© 2011 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
- 15. 15
A Culture of Consumption
– Department stores
– Chain stores and mail-order houses
Leisure
– Sports and class distinctions
– Spectator sports for the urban masses
City Entertainment at Home and on the Road
– The streets, the saloon, dance halls, boxing
exhibitions, concerts and theater
– Popular music and the coming of jazz
© 2011 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.