1 / 42

The Age of the City

The Age of the City. Chapter 18. The Urbanization of America. The Lure of the City population 1865-1910 urban population increases x 7 1920 consensus: first time a majority of Americans were living in urban areas (2,500+) New York: 1 million in 1860... 3 million 1900

Télécharger la présentation

The Age of the City

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Age of the City Chapter 18

  2. The Urbanization of America • The Lure of the City • population • 1865-1910 urban population increases x 7 • 1920 consensus: first time a majority of Americans were living in urban areas (2,500+) • New York: 1 million in 1860... 3 million 1900 • Chicago: 100,000 in 1860... 1 million 1900 • urban families • high infant mortality rate • declining fertility rate • high death rate from disease • why go? • conveniences • entertainment • jobs • experiences unavailable in rural communities • transportation: trains and ocean liners

  3. The Urbanization of America Cont’d • Migrations • women • opportunities on farm limited • results in fewer family units on farms than before • influence of mail-order catalogs • blacks • poverty, debt, oppression in rural areas • factory jobs rare... professional jobs non-existent • 10,000+ communities in major cities by turn of 20th Century • immigrants • 10 million between 1860-1890 / 18 million 1890-1920 • Greatest number came from Eastern Europe • Early immigrants (Germans, not Irish) well educated and financed = buy land, start business... not the case with these immigrants... settled into urban areas to work unskilled jobs

  4. The Urbanization of America Cont’d • The Ethnic City • 1890 foreign-born population and their children dominate urban centers • 87% of the population of Chicago (more Polish people than in Warsaw) • 80% of the population of New York (more Irish than in Dublin / more Germans than Hamburg) • 84% of the population of Milwaukee and Detroit • huge diversity • transition from native country to America • rural life to urban “immigrant ghettos” • staying together • fraternal organizations • native foods • newspapers and theaters • voting blocks • different values leading to different levels of advancement: solidarity v. integration • impact of racism: Africans Americans, Asians and Mexicans treated the worst

  5. The Urbanization of America Cont’d • Assimilation • ethnic ties often “competed” against desire/need to assimilate • women: from arranged marriages to the workforce • Factors • English taught in schools • English only on the job • large stores selling American food and clothing • Church leaders encouraging parishioners to adopt to American ways

  6. The Urbanization of America Cont’d • Exclusion • Haymarket reaction • Native workers animosity towards people willing to work for less • Henry Bowers 1887: American Protective Association (Anti-Catholic) • Immigration Restriction League: more sophisticated nativism • Few laws passed by Congress because many powerful Native-born Americans welcomed Immigration... business interests

  7. The Urban Landscape • The Creation of Public Space • urban parks: one of the most important innovations of the Industrial Era • Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux teamed up to design Central Park • public buildings: libraries, art galleries, natural history museums, theatres, concert opera halls • rebuilding cities... European competition

  8. The Urban Landscape Cont’d • Housing the Well-to-do • fashionable districts • suburbs and the rise of “clean air” and front lawns • Housing Workers and the Poor • space scarce + demand high = little bargaining power for renters = bad living conditions • 1894 Manhattan =143 people per acre • “Miserable Abodes” • South (Charleston, New Orleans, Richmond) = former slave quarters • Boston = wooden “triple deckers” • Baltimore and Philadelphia = brick houses • New York (like most cities) = tenements

  9. The Urban Landscape Cont’d • Housing Workers and the Poor Cont’d • Tenement originally meant “multiple family rental building”, but by late 19th century the word had become synonymous with “slum” • windowless rooms • little/no heating • little/no plumbing • very crowded... three/four people into each room • Jacob Riis How the Other Half Lives ... solution = raze the slum dwellings without replacing

  10. The Urban Landscape Cont’d • Urban Transportation • paved roads (blocks, bricks or asphalt) • Streetcars drawn on tracks by horses... not fast enough • Cable Cars (New York, Chicago, San Francisco) • New York: filthy steam powered train • Boston: first American subway 1897 • 1880s: Brooklyn Bridge

  11. The Urban Landscape Cont’d • The “Skyscraper” • no building taller than five stories • stairs • building techniques • Elevator and steel beams / 1850s and 1870s • 1870 The Equitable Building in New York = seven stories • steel girder construction • Louis Sullivan: large windows, sheer lines, limited ornamentation... emphasis on height

  12. Strains of Urban Life • Fire and Disease • “Great Fires” • poor building planning • lack of public services... i.e. fire departments • 1906 Earthquake in San Francisco* • Great Chicago Fire • Disease • little understanding of the connection between poor sewage disposal and water contamination with outbreaks of diseases such as typhoid fever and cholera • flush toilets and sewer systems did not appear in cities until the 1870s... but the sewage went into streams and open ditches....

  13. Strains of Urban Life Cont’d • Urban Poverty • private philanthropic organizations focus on “deserving poor” • Salvation Army in America (1879) • concentrated more on religious revivalism than on relief • Protestants v. Catholics • poor starving children “street arabs”... focus of reformers, but no lasting solutions to problems

  14. Strains of Urban Life Cont’d • Crime and Violence • Poverty and overcrowding = increase in crime • 25 murders per million in 1880 / 100 murders per million in 1900... West and South... • Native born Americans likely to commit crimes as immigrants • Public officials recognize need for larger police force • rise of detectives • corruption and brutality • “Urban National Guard” build armories (?!)

  15. Strains of Urban Life Cont’d • The Machine and the Boss • large/chaotic immigrant growth created a large, powerful political base • “The Boss” was chief organizer and ensured loyalty through many different means • Graft and corruption abundant • William M. Tweed (notorious boss/mayor) and Tammany Hall (New York machine) • corrupt... but accomplished • How it worked • power of organized, immigrant voters • connection to the wealthy who profited from their dealings with the bosses • structural weakness of government • “invisible government” provided an alternative to the inadequacy of the regular government • Turn of the century people began to call for structural changes in the nature of the city government

  16. The Rise of Mass Consumption • Patterns of Income and Consumption • growth of middle class “white collar” workers... sharp increase in salary • working class incomes rose... but from a lower base and more slowly • male dominated labor (steel) salaries rose 1/3 from 1890 to 1900 • female, Mexican and Black dominated areas saw very little increases • supplemental incomes and boarders • ready made clothes = rise in personal style and fashion • improved diets = better health = life expectancy rose six years from 1900-1920 • tin cans and food • refrigerated railroad cars • iceboxes

  17. The Rise of Mass Consumption Cont’d • Chains Stores and Mail-Order Houses • Chain Stores • Woolworths and A&P able to sell manufactured goods at lower prices than the local, independent stores with which they competed • many feared they would jeopardize the character of their communities • Mail-Order Houses • Montgomery Ward and Sears Roebuck • isolated people now on the cutting edge of fashion and technology

  18. The Rise of Mass Consumption Cont’d • Department Stores • Marshall Field in Chicago... Macy’s in New York... Jordan Marsh in Boston... etc... • transformed the concept of shopping • brought together under one roof and enormous array of products • stove to create and atmosphere of wonder and excitement and to make it social • economics of scale to lower costs against the individual shops they competed with

  19. The Rise of Mass Consumption Cont’d • Women as Consumers • more job opportunities for women... retail clerks, waitresses... • Florence Kelly & The National Consumes League... took the stance that women as consumers should be entitled to more rights • wages and working conditions • public life

  20. Leisure and the Consumer Society • Redefining Leisure • Leisure previously scorned in America (Puritan culture) connection to laziness and sloth • Middle Class, Laborers and Farmers all found themselves with more time in the weekends and/or evenings (8 + 8 + 8) • Simon Patten goal of economy “should be an abundance of goods and the pursuit of pleasure” • intensely public character and the importance of “going out”

  21. Leisure and the Consumer Society Cont’d • Spectator Sports • Baseball ... Alexander Cartwright v. Abner Doubleday • by the end of the Civil War 200 amateur teams existed • first salaried team was the Cincinnati Red Stockings in 1869 • 1903 First World Series... Boston Red Sox defeat the Pittsburgh Pirates • important business • attracted crowds as large as 50,000 (men) • most baseball players were laborers... almost all teams were in industrial cities where they could draw an audience from workers

  22. Leisure and the Consumer Society Cont’d • Spectator Sports Cont’d • Football • originated in college scene • first game was between Princeton and Rutgers 1869 • similar to Rugby • use of “ringers” leads to establishment of Big Ten in 1896 • 18 College Students died and over 100 seriously hurt... NCAA formed 1910

  23. Leisure and the Consumer Society Cont’d • Spectator Sports Cont’d • Basketball • Canadian Dr. James Naismith 1891 in Springfield, Massachusetts • Boxing • long been a disreputable activity • adoption of Marquis of Queensberry rules (gloves and three minute rounds) • John L. Sullivan... heavyweight champion of the world in 1882 • Horse Racing (Kentucky Derby) • Gambling • “throwing” of 1919 World Series by the Chicago “Black” Sox • “fixed” boxing • horse racing • Women in Sports • limited early: tennis, golf, croquet • later: track, crew, swimming... challenged notion that vigorous exercise was dangerous to women

  24. Leisure and the Consumer Society Cont’d • Music and Theater • many ethnic communities maintained their own theaters • distinctive American entertainment: the musical comedy • George Cohen, an Irish entertainer wrote songs such as “You’re a Grand Old Flag” • Irving Berlin, an Yiddish entertainer wrote songs such as “God Bless America” • Vaudeville entertainment... inexpensive variety show... could be shown in saloons • “blackface” performers

  25. Leisure and the Consumer Society Cont’d • The Movies • Thomas Edison and others create technology of motion pictures in 1880s • Early movies plotless • D.W. Griffith (MGM) started silent epics such as The Birth of a Nation • audiences overwhelmingly white

  26. Leisure and the Consumer Society Cont’d • Working-Class Leisure • street camaraderie • ethnically specific saloons • bare knuckle boxing... *opportunity to show strength and courage... something that the working world did not always provide them with • The Fourth of July • one of the few full days of leisure for working-class Americans • day of celebrating not just US independence, but the culture of individual groups • wealthy middle class stayed away from festivals • In the South • post-Civil War 4th celebrations were held by blacks in Charleston celebrating the Union • Once Reconstruction efforts failed, laws passed restricting blacks celebration redefining the meaning of the day to the Southern cause

  27. Leisure and the Consumer Society Cont’d • Private Pursuits • Reading • dime novels (fiction... Wild West, scientific adventure) • novels of “moral uplift” (Horatio Alger) • women: romance, animals and children growing up (Little Women) • Music • middle class families placed high value on learning to play an instrument • sales of sheet music soared • classical v. ragtime

  28. Leisure and the Consumer Society Cont’d • Mass Communication • newspapers become and important business • 1870 to 1910 the circulation of newspapers increased nearly nine fold... from under 3 million to more than 24 million...a rate 3x times as great as the pop. increase • reporters salaries increase • opinion separated from fact • telegraph and the national press service • yellow journalism • William Randolph Hearst controls 9 newspapers and two magazines • Joseph Pulitzer • deliberately sensationalized information in an effort to reach a mass audience

  29. High Culture in the Age of the City • Separation into wealthy “high-brow” and working-class “low-brow” cultures • The Literature of Urban America • Mark Twain Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn... evoked an older more natural world • Stephen Crane The Red Badge of Courage and Maggie: A Girl of The Streets... powerful portrayal of the plight of the working class • Theodore Dreiser Sister Carrie exposed hardships of single women struggling in the city • details of hard labor and prostitution • Upton Sinclair The Jungle reveal the horrors of industrial capitalism • Kate Chopin The Awakening explored the oppressive features of traditional marriage

  30. High Culture in the Age of the City Cont’d • Art in the Age of the City • Winslow Homer... vigorously American • Neil Whistler... one of the first Western Artists to incorporate Oriental concepts into American and European art • Ashcan school – captured realistic struggle of American life • John Singer Sargent - portraits • John Sloan – dreariness of American slums • George Bellows – vigor and violence of prize fights • Armory Show in New York City... “controversial”

  31. High Culture in the Age of the City Cont’d • The Impact of Darwinism • Natural Selection as a challenge to the biblical story of Creation... attested that history was not the working out of some divine plan, but rather it was a random process dominated by the fiercest or luckiest competitors • Lead to two major divisions in American culture • Urban education vs. Christian (Protestant) Fundamentalists • Rich vs. Poor (Social Darwinism) • Lead to other major theories • Pragmatism: no idea or institution was valid unless it worked and unless it stood the test of experience • Edward Ross and Frank Ward urged applying the scientific method to the solution of social and political problems • growth of anthropology (and preservation of American Indians)

  32. High Culture in the Age of the City Cont’d • Toward Universal Schooling • late 19th century was a time of rapid reform and change in American schools and universities • spread of free public primary and secondary education • 1860 there were only 100 public high schools in all of the USA • 1900 the number had reached 6,000 • 1914 12,000 • Rural Areas and the South (blacks) lagged far behind • Morrill Land Grant of the Civil War Era: federal gov. donated land to states for the establishment of colleges • 1865 states in the South and the West took advantage of the law • 69 “land grant” institutions were established in the last decades of the century • California (UC), Illinois, Minnesota, Wisconsin • Other Universities benefited from millions of dollars contributed by business tycoons • Columbia, Chicago, Harvard, Northwestern, Princeton and Yale • Other Philanthropists founded Universities in their name • Vanderbilt, Johns Hopkins, Cornell, Duke, Tulane, Stanford, Creighton

  33. Made By: Jennifer Ong Made By: Jennifer Ong

  34. High Culture in the Age of the City Cont’d • The Education of Women • public high schools • accepted women... but opportunities for higher education were rare • proponents of women’s colleges saw the institutions as places where female students would not be treated as “second-class” citizens, by predominantly male student bodies and faculties • women’s college = emergence of women’s community • education as liberating • college-aged women married later • continued professional carriers after marriage and motherhood

More Related