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Chapter 19 Rise & Reform of Industial Cities

Chapter 19 Rise & Reform of Industial Cities. The Shape of the Industrial City Steam engines replaced water power in cities Mass Transit Trolley cars, elevated railroads, and subways emerged in large cities Skyscrapers First appeared in Chicago - Chicago School led by Louis Sullivan

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Chapter 19 Rise & Reform of Industial Cities

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  1. Chapter 19 Rise & Reform of Industial Cities

  2. The Shape of the Industrial City Steam engines replaced water power in cities Mass Transit Trolley cars, elevated railroads, and subways emerged in large cities Skyscrapers First appeared in Chicago - Chicago School led by Louis Sullivan Allowed landowners to make money on small plots of land by building up The Electric City Electricity emerged in cities in the later 19th century “A light is as good as a policeman.” The New Metropolis

  3. William Le Baron Jenney • 1832 – 1907 • “Father of the ModernSkyscraper”

  4. W. Le Baron Jenney: CentralY.M.C.A., Chicago, 1891

  5. FlatironBuilding NYC – 1902 D. H. Burnham

  6. The New Metropolis Newcomers and Neighborhoods • Men and women moved to cities from rural areas (in addition to immigrants) • Financial opportunities were available • Immigrants often lived in the same communities - ethnic clustering • Many institutions served ethnic communities - newspapers, singing societies, Yiddish theater, etc. • African Americans began moving to cities (more so after WWI) • Virtually all faced discrimination - few jobs were available - Porters and domestic servant

  7. Hester Street – Jewish Section

  8. Mulberry Street – “Little Italy”

  9. The New Metropolis • Race Riots: - Attacks on African Americans by white mobs - Atlanta, 1906, 24 blacks were killed • Tenement Houses - (Dumbell Tenements) -5-6 story, cramped apartments, many families sharing few rooms

  10. The New Metropolis • City Cultures • Urban Amusements • Vaudeville Theater - music, skits, and magic shows • Nickelodeons - $.05 movie theaters • Amusement parks - Coney Island, NY - inspired other amusement parks throughout the country

  11. The New Metropolis • Ragtime and City Blues • Ragtime - popular among all classes and races • Introduced at the Chicago’s World Fair in 1893 - Devil in the White City, Erik Larsen • Blues - appealed to individuals in cities - spoke of handwork and heartache • Sex and the City • Dating became more acceptable in large cities without chaperones • Men often paid for women since women had little money - earned less wages • New York City had a large gay population - 1969 Stonewall Riots

  12. The New Metropolis • City Cultures • High Culture • Rich helped promote museums - some out of a sense of duty • NY’s MOMA in 1880 • Andrew Carnegie helped create over 1,000 libraries across the nation - Gospel of Wealth

  13. The New Metropolis • Urban Journalism • Yellow Journalism - sensationalizing and exaggerating news stories in order to sell newspapers • Cause of the Spanish-American War • Muckrakers - term coined by Teddy Roosevelt to describe the journalists that exposed corruption and problems of society

  14. Governing the Great City - **The Shame of the Cities** - Lincoln Steffens: - Wrote about the corruption between municipal (city) governments and big businesses - Urban Machines - Many utilities were provided by private businesses, not the city government - Political Machines: Tammany Hall, NYC - Controlled many aspects of city government -Provided jobs, food, money, etc. to constituents in exchange for votes and support • George Washington Plunkitt - leader of Tammany Hall, favored “honest graft” • -“Boss” Tweed - favored “dishonest graft” - bribery, stole over $200 million, later caught in Cuba due to Thomas Nast!

  15. Governing the Great City • The Limits of Machine Government • Mayors (Quincy in Boston) began to build public pools, gyms, playgrounds and other spaces • Also fought to lower fares on streetcars

  16. Crucibles of Progressive Reform • Fighting Dirt and Vice • ***How the Other Half Lives*** - Jacob Riis • Helped expose plight of the poor in tenement houses- • Cleaning Up Urban Environments • Disease spread through cities quickly - cholera, typhoid fever - led to a clean-water initiative • New sewage and drainage systems were established in large cities • “City Beautiful” movement - sought to increase and improve the number of park spaces

  17. Tenement Slum Living

  18. Lodgers Huddled Together

  19. Struggling Immigrant Families

  20. Crucibles of Progressive Reform • Closing Red Light Districts • Reasons that women entered prostitution: • Low paying jobs, hard economic times, abuse, etc. • Mann Act - made it illegal to transport prostitutes across state lines

  21. Crucibles of Progressive Reform • The Movement for Social Settlements • Hull House - Jane Addams, Chicago, IL, 1889 • Helped poor women, immigrants, and children adjust to city life • Provided a bathhouse, day care, etc. • Inspired other settlement houses through the country • Became instrumental in social work and the Progressive movement • Margaret Sanger: • Advocated birth control (illegal in many areas at the time)

  22. Crucibles of Progressive Reform • Cities and National Politics • Upton Sinclair - The Jungle (1906) • Helped inspire the Meat Inspection Act and Pure Food and Drug Act (1906) • National Consumer’s League (NCL) - led by Florence Kelley • Advocated laws to protect workers

  23. Crucibles of Progressive Reform • Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire - March 25, 1911 • 146 employees died - average age was 19 • Alfred Smith - NY state legislator and future presidential candidate established a commission to investigate the disaster • Helped inspire new laws • Frances Perkins - saw the fire from Columbia University • Became the first woman appointed to a presidential cabinet (FDR)

  24. Triangle Shirtwaist Fire

  25. Triangle Shirtwaist Fire

  26. Triangle Shirtwaist Fire

  27. Triangle Shirtwaist Fire

  28. Triangle Shirtwaist Fire Relatives Review Bodies145 Dead

  29. Inside the Building After the Fire

  30. The Recap • Tenement Houses - Jacob Riis • Immigrants lived in similar communities • Yellow Journalism - Spanish American War • Muckrakers • Political Machines - Boss Tweed • Settlement Houses - Jane Addams and the Hull House • The Jungle and its effects • Frances Perkins

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