Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Cities versus Farms America at the end of the 19 th Century.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Cities versus Farms America at the end of the 19 th Century."— Presentation transcript:

1 Cities versus Farms America at the end of the 19 th Century

2 City Culture

3 Immigration Old v. New Immigration – Old – NW Europe, mostly Protestants, mostly English speaking, literate and skilled – New – S and E Europe, religious diverse, variety of languages, many illiterate and unskilled – 1890-1915 Peak of New Immigration Restricting Immigration – Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 – “Undesirable” restrictions; Ellis Island – BUT no Quota Acts until the 1920s

4

5 Building New Cities Streetcars Skyscrapers Parks – Frederick Law Olmstead Public Services – Sewage – Street lighting – Public water – Police and Fire Departments

6

7 Ethnic Neighborhoods Jacob Riis How the Other Half Lives Dumbbell tenements No building codes Defacto Segregation – North End, 5 Points, China Town, Southie, etc… Start of “white flight”

8

9

10 City Politics Boss Tweed and Tammany Hall

11 Entertainment in the City – Leisure Time Amusement Parks Vaudeville Professional sports – Baseball, boxing, basketball, football Amateur sports – Bicycling, golf, tennis, athletic clubs

12

13 Gilded Age Politics Close elections between Democrats & Republicans Massive party patronage – leading to corruption

14 Rutherford Hayes 1876-1880 - Republican Ended Reconstruction – removed troops from the South Temperance reformer “Lemonade Lucy” Pledged to serve only 1 term

15 James Garfield 1880-1881 – Republican Garfield was a “Halfbreed” and his VP Chester Arthus was a “Stalwart” Garfield was overwhelmed with patronage job seekers An angry Stalwart shot Garfield in 1881 – Garfield died 11 weeks later

16 Chester Arthur 1881-1884 Republican Tried to reform civil service

17 Grover Cleveland 1884-1888 Democrat Known as an honest politician Frugal & limited government New civil service system – Pendleton Act of 1881 – Civil Service Commission Money – growing issues Tariffs

18

19 Money Issues Should the money supply be expanded? More Money/Soft Money – favored by debtors, farmers, small businesses – Borrow money at lower interest rates – Pay off loans more easily with inflated dollars Less Money/Hard Money – supported by bankers, creditors, investors, & big business, support for the gold standard – Dollars would hold their value against inflation – The value of the dollar would increase

20 Greenback Party Greenbacks – paper money not backed by specie (gold or silver) Greenback Party – supporters of paper money Goal – increase amount of money in circulation

21 Gold or Silver? 1870s – Congress stopped coining of silver (Crime of 1873) Bland-Allison Act (1878) – allowed limited coinage of silver (16:1) Supporters of soft money called for UNLIMITED COINAGE OF SILVER

22 Benjamin Harrison 1889-1892 Republican Won election of 1888 with tariff issue – Republicans supported high tariff – Democrats supported lower tariff

23 Billion-dollar Congress Republican control of the White House and Congress 1888-1890 McKinley Tariff of 1890 Increased pensions to Civil War veterans Sherman Antitrust Act Sherman Silver Purchase Act of 1890

24 The Populist Party Movement Rose of the Grange and Farmers Alliance movements

25 Omaha Platform 1892 Direct election of US senators Initiatives and referendums Unlimited coinage of silver Graduated income tax Public ownership of RRs Public ownership of telegraph & telephone system Federal loans for farmers 8-hour work day

26 Grover Cleveland Reelected in 1892 Panic of 1893 – Stock market crashed – Over speculation – Increased foreclosures (esp. farms) – High unemployment – Last 4 years – GC’s response – laissez-faire and support of the gold standard

27

28 Coxey’s Army 1894 March to Washington Thousands of unemployed Led by Populist Jacob Coxey of Ohio Demanded a public works program to create jobs Coxey and others were arrested – the army left Washington

29 Election of 1896 Democrats – William Jennings Bryan – “Cross of Gold” – Unlimited coinage of silver – Took over many Populist issues Republicans – William McKinley – Conservative politics – Industry – Marcus Hanna – big business political boss

30

31 William McKinley 1897-1901 Republican Economic recovery Gold standard became official 1900

32

33 Why did Populism decline? 1. The economy experienced rapid change. 2. The era of small producers and farmers was fading away. 3. Race divided the Populist Party, especially in the South. 4. The Populists were not able to break existing party loyalties. 5. Most of their agenda was co-opted by the Democratic Party.


Download ppt "Cities versus Farms America at the end of the 19 th Century."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google