Taming the City Life in the Emerging Urban Society in the 19 th Century.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Life in the Emerging Urban Society
Advertisements

Life During the Industrial Revolution McKay: Chapter 24 Pictionary Exercise.
Queen Victoria was the ruling monarch of the time, and was married to her cousin, Prince Albert. The Industrial Revolution was coming into full swing,
The Industrial Revolution begins in Britain, spreads to other countries, and has a strong impact on economics, politics, and society. Rail locomotives.
Chapter 24: :Life in emerging Urban Society London, as seen here in the 1840’s was the first to face the problems of urbanization.
Unit 7: Chapter 24 * The Victorian Age Life in the Emerging Urban Society.
Bourgeois Culture -Key Concepts-. I. Taming the City.
Chapter 20 Section 2.  Urban populations grew quickly because of migration to cities from rural areas  Driven by a lack of jobs and a lack of land 
Adjusting to Industrialization. Urbanization Cities grew along with the factories that sprang up there With all the factories in cities, there was a large.
QUIZ pp SOCIAL STRUCTURE OF THE MASS SOCIETY After 1871  improving standards of living/rising wages…BUT… 1.Gap between rich and poor still.
AP World History POD #19 – Revolutions in Europe Modern European Urbanization.
Chapter th Century Society Urbanization and Intellectual Movements
INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
Chapter 9 The Industrial Revolution Essential Question Discuss the following questions with your neighbors and be prepared to share with the.
Social Change in the 1800s (particularly )
Urbanization During the Industrial Revolution people moved from villages and towns to the cities where the factories were located. Garbage filled the overcrowded.
Rich and Poor and Those in Between (Chp. 24) Emily Jones.
The Industrial Revolution
The Emergence of Mass Society  New Urban Environment  Growth of cities: by 1914, 80 percent of the population in Britain lived in cities (40 percent.
The World of Cities 9-2 p Medicine and Population  : Europe population doubled because the death rate fell  Farming, food storage,
The Industrial Revolution City Life Medicine and Population Due to the declining death rate, the population of Europe more than doubled between 1800.
Industrialized Society Urbanization: a NEW way to live.
Industrialization: Case Study Manchester
Life in the Emerging Urban Society, 1840–
Unit 6: Chapter 24 Life in the Emerging Urban Society.
Mass Society and Democracy The Second Industrial Revolution-New Products  New Products Substitution of steel for iron Electricity Telephone.
Chapter 24.  Since the Middle Ages, European cities had been centers of government, culture, and large-scale commerce.  Cities were also crowded, dirty,
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. The Rise of the Modern City.
INDUSTRIALISM!. A Quiz Reading Check 1. What are enclosures? 2. Name one invention in the textile industry 3-5. What three modes of transportation became.
Industrialization – part 1 (Ch. 9, Sec. 2) 1. Cities Grow During Industrial Revolution 2. Living Conditions in Industrial Cities 3. Working Conditions.
Urbanization. Population Growth Britain was first European country to experience urban growth – 50% in 1891 Population of Europe increased by 50% between.
Rise of the City. From Farm to City Before the Civil War most people lived on farms –1860 urban population of 6 million By 1900 most people lived in urban.
Life in the Cities. Industrialism  Mainly starts in England during this time. why?  France focuses on finer goods and farming  Germany lacks unity,
Positive and Negative Effects
THE RISE OF THE CITIES CHAPTER 6 SECTION 2. THE POPULATION EXPLOSION Between 1800 and 1900, the population in Europe doubles despite families having less.
URBAN SOCIETY IN THE 19 TH CENTURY. What was life like in the cities?
Emily Gall Allison McGinnis Kate Pelch Kinsley Reinhart Ranjot Dhillon Period 4.
Powerpoint Templates Page 1 Powerpoint Templates Rich and Poor and Those in Between Charlotte AllenLindsey Dudek Sanveer Chhina Dylan VasquezTravis McDonald.
Industrialization. Changes Positives Better quality of life Plentiful jobs Negatives Human suffering Unhealthy conditions Child labor Class tensions.
A History of Western Society Eleventh Edition CHAPTER 22 Life in the Emerging Urban Society 1840–1914 Copyright © 2014 by Bedford/St. Martin’s John P.
The Age of the City APUSH MS. Vargas. Urbanization By 1920 a census revealed that the majority of Americans lived in “Urban areas = people This.
9.2 Industrializaton Positive and Negative Effects.
Industrialization and Cities. Objectives O Understand the cause and effect of the Industrial Revolution in England.
History of the census. How will your lives change......in 10 years time? Work/ school? Leisure? Travel? Housing?Health?
THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION Mr. Trbovich World History.
The Rise of Cities HWH UNIT 6 CHAPTER 9.2. Percentage of English population living in cities over 20,000 people 1801: 17% 1851: 35% 1891: 54% London was.
Notes – Even though most people after 1871 enjoyed a rising of standard of living, great poverty remained in the West. As well, several middle-class.
MASS SOCIETY IN THE 19 TH CENTURY. ORGANIZING THE WORKING CLASSES Labor Unions collectively bargained for more rights for the working class –Strikes –By.
Ways of the World: A Brief Global History First Edition CHAPTER XVIII Revolutions of Industrialization 1750–1914 First Industrial Society Robert W. Strayer.
Rich and Poor and Those in Between
Taming the City AP European History
Positive and Negative Effects
AP EURO Unit #5 – Nationalism of 19th Century PPT #509 Taming the City, and The Rich and the Poor (ISSUES OF URBANIZATION)
The Rise of the Modern City
Chapter 24 Part I Taming the City
Industrialization Chapter 9.2.
Social Consequences of the Industrial Revolution
Modern World History Chapter 9, Section 2 Industrialization
The industrial Revolution and the building of the British empire
Life in the city What were conditions like?
Modern World History Chapter 9, Section 2 Industrialization
THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
The Rise of the Modern City
Industrialization & Urbanization
Effects of Urbanization
The Rise of the Modern City
Life in Modern Urban Society
The Rise of the Modern City
Bell RInger List two country’s who are primarily industrial? List two country’s who are primarily agricultural? Name an inventor and why their invention.
Impact of Industrialization
Presentation transcript:

Taming the City Life in the Emerging Urban Society in the 19 th Century

Industry and the Growth of Cities Cities were congested, dirty and unhealthy “Walking Cities” # of people living in cities of 20,000 + in England 1.5 million (17% of total population) 6.3 million (35% of total population) 15.6 million (54% of total population) Urbanization occurred quickly  housing conditions horrible

Industry and the Growth of Cities Open Drains and sewers Unpaved Streets Manchester- 200 people shared single outhouse “millions of English men, women, and children were living in shit.” Legacy of poor rural housing conditions in preindustrial society

Public Health and Bacterial Revolution Edwin Chadwick- (Bethamite) Jeremy Bentham ( )- “greatest good for the greatest number” Disease and death caused poverty Cholera epidemic of 1846 Chadwick collected detailed reports and published findings in 1842  basis for 1 st public health law created national health board and authorities began building modern sanitary systems

Public Health and Bacterial Revolution Miasmatic Theory- belief that people contract disease when they breathe the bad odors of decay and putrefying excrement 1840s-1840s- Shift in Thought Suggestion that contagion is spread through the filth and not caused by it Germ Theory- Louis Pasteur ( ) Pasteur found that fermentation depended on the growth of living organisms and that the activity of these organisms could be suppressed by heating a beverage Pasteurization

Public Health and Bacterial Revolution Robert Koch- Germany Described life cycle of bacteria Joseph Lister ( )- English surgeon Chemical disinfectant applied to a wound dressing would “destroy the life of the floating particles” Antiseptic Principle Mortality rates began to decline

Urban Planning Practice of urban planning revived by 1850 France took the lead under Napoleon III (r ) Baron Georges Haussmann- razed Paris Central city not twice the size of New York’s Central Park  lived 1/3 of the city’s 1 million inhabitants Few open spaced and only two public parks Created broad, straight, tree lined boulevards Demolished worst slums Better housing constructed for the middle class More open spaces and parks Improved sewers

Transportation Mass Public Transportation 1870s- private companies operated horse drawn streetcars Electric streetcar- cheaper, faster and more dependable 1886-horse-drawn streetcars of A-H, France, Germany, and G.B. carried 900 million riders 1910-electric streetcars  6.7 billion riders England % of the urban population was “overcrowded”

Rich and Poor and Those in Between

Social Structure The standard of living increased for the average person along with wage increases Hardship and poverty were not eliminated The wealthiest 5% of society received the 33% of the national income The wealthiest 20% of society received the 50-60% of the national income Bottom 30% received 10% or less of all income Income taxes on wealthy light or non-existant

Distribution of Income in Britain, Prussia, and Denmark in 1913

The Urban Landscape: Madrid in 1900 by Enrique Martinez Cubells y Ruiz The painting shows the class distinctions: the carriages are for the wealthy upper middle class while the streetcars are for the lower members of the middle

The Middle Classes The Middle Class was divided into 3 groups: the upper middle class, the middle middle class, and the lower middle class The Upper Middle Class: Successful business families that were drawn to an aristocratic lifestyle Bought country homes, servants, private carriages, and titles of nobility in order to show their wealth Often married into noble families

The Middle Classes Middle middle class Moderately successful merchants, industrialists, lawyers, and doctors Comfortable but lacked great wealth New professions in engineering and management, which were created due to technological and industrial developments, fell under the middle middle class

The Middle Classes Lower Middle Class Independent shop keepers, small traders, and tiny manufacturers White-Collar workers: salesmen, managers, and clerks that earned low wages but were determined to move up in the ranks of the middle class Elementary school teachers, nurses, and dentists moved up into the middle class through improvements in mass education

Middle Class Culture Food and servants were the major expenses of a middle class family The number if servants a family owned showed the magnitude of the family's income Dinner parties were the most popular social occasions and were very elaborate and elegant

"A Corner of the Table" by Paul-Émile Chabas

Middle Class Culture Many families lived in rented apartments rather than homes The factory, department store, and sewing machine reduced prices for clothes and provided a larger variety of clothing Families paid extra to ensure that their children received the best education The middle class upheld a strict moral code of behavior Hard work, self-discipline and personal achievement Denounced gambling and drunkenness Praised sexual purity and fidelity

Advertisement for the Bon Marché department store in Paris

View of the elegant Garniér Opera House in Paris, France, ca

The Working Classes 4 out of 5 people belonged to working class Livelihood depended on physical labor Did not employ servants The working class was divided into three categories: highly skilled, semiskilled workers, and unskilled workers

Urban Social Hierarchy

The Working Classes Highly skilled workers- 15% Know as “labor aristocracy” Earned almost 2/3 the salary of the lower middle class Construction bosses, factory foremen, handicraft trades (cabinet makers, jewelry, printers), shipbuilders, and railway engineers Shared many of the moral and cultural values of the middle class, but they did not aspire to rise to the middle class. Instead they were focused on serving as natural leaders and role models to the other members of the working class

"The Labor Aristocracy"

The Working Classes Semiskilled workers Carpenters, bricklayers, pipe- fitters Made relatively good wages Unskilled Workers Day laborers, "helpers", street vendors, and market people Unorganized and divided, only united by the meager wages they received Domestic servants made up a large portion of the working class-many were young girls who moved from the country to the city in search of work and a husband

"A School for Servants"

Working Class Leisure and Religion Drinking was the most popular activity of the working class Heavy drinking became less and less socially acceptable Pubs and taverns drew many people as they were the sites of social and political events Modern spectator sports such as racing and soccer became popular Music halls and Vaudeville theaters were the working class version of the middle class opera houses Common themes- drunkenness, sexual intercourse and pregnancy before marriage, marital differences, and problems with mother-in- laws

Poster for Moulin Rouge dance hall

Working Class Leisure and Religion Religion was a source of comfort to many people The church attendance, especially in the urban classes did decline during the 19th century as people became more secular and less religious Churches came to be viewed as symbols of conservatism as the people became increasingly radical in their political views the church was seen as an ally to the people's political enemies