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The urbanization of America

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Presentation on theme: "The urbanization of America"— Presentation transcript:

1 The urbanization of America

2 Urbanization & industrialization SIMULTANEOUS
Cities provide laborers, market Shift from rural to urban By 1900s- 40% of US pop in cities, towns By more Americans in urban areas than rural Who? Immigrants from outside & inside US From farms to cities- jobs African Americans : 1 million southern blacks into northern/western cities

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4 City change Streetcars & mass transit
Transportation improvement  growth Horse-drawn  electric, elevated RRs, subways, steel cable bridges Brooklyn Bridge, 1883 People live outside of city center Escape pollution, poverty, crime CON? Segregation of workers by income, race, ethnicity Working poor in older areas Skyscrapers From out to up Otis elevator 1885- William Le Baron Jenny- 10-story Home Insurance Co. Building (Chicago)

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8 Ethnic neighborhoods Middle-upper out, working poor into cities
Landlords divide apartments/housing into small, windowless rooms  slums, tenement housing 4k+/city block Overcrowded, filthy, disease-ridden Cholera, typhoid, TB 1879- NYC law for each bedroom to have a window  dumbbell tenements Ethnic neighborhoods = continuation of culture “ghettos” Social clubs, churches, language, culture, newspapers, schools

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13 Residential suburbs Opposite of Europe Rich in city, poor in outside
Movement OUT influenced by Available low cost Inexpensive transportation Low-cost construction Ethnic/racial prejudice American fondness for “green,” privacy, detached/individual housing Frederick Law Olmstead Central Park, Biltmore, suburban communities Curved roads, open spaces, “lawns”

14 City improvements By 1890s, “City Beautiful” movement begins
Tree-lined blvds, public parks, public cultural attractions Private companies operate services that develop cities Streetcars, utilities Increase in disease, filth, crime, waste, water pollution  attempt to reform city government Municipal water purification, sewer systems, waste disposal, street lights, police depts., zoning laws to regulate development

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18 Immigrants & political machines
Consolidation in business mirrored in urban politics Political parties w/in cities under control of organized groups of politicians Ex: Tammany Hall, Boss Tweed Orders down, reward supporters with gov. jobs Organize to coordinate needs of businesses, immigrants, underprivileged In return? VOTE The good: modern services into cities, parks, services The bad: bribery, intimidation, graft, corruption, fraud 65% of NYC public building fund into Tweed’s pockets

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21 The awakening of reform in urban america

22 Urban problems + poverty  renewed social-consciousness of middle class
Books of Social Criticism Henry George, 1879, Progress and Poverty Critical inequality in wealth via industrialization Propose solution to poverty- all taxes replaced with single tax on land Edward Bellamy, 1888, Looking Backward, Vision of a future w/o poverty, greed, crime  shift in public opinion Away from pure laissez-faire  greater gov. regulation

23 Settlement houses Started by young, well-educated men & women (middle class) Create foundation for job of “social worker” Volunteers, political activists Child-labor laws, housing reform, women’s rights Frances Perkins, Harry Hopkins (1930s- FDR/ND) Settle in immigrant neighborhoods so could learn problems of immigrants Live/work in settlement houses that help relieve effects of poverty Provide social services for neighborhood Taught English, early childhood education, industrial skills, theaters, musical schools EX: Hull House, Jane Addams (Chicago, 1889)

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25 Social gospel 1880s-1890s: Protestant clergy advocate social justice for poor Must apply Xn principles to social problems & progressive reform Walter Rauschenbusch (Baptist minister from NY) Work in Hell’s Kitchen Encourage middle-class Protestants to solve urban problems

26 Women’s movement 1848- Seneca Falls = launch of women’s suffrage
By Stanton & Anthony found Nat’l Am. Woman Suffrage Assoc. WY = first state to grant full suffrage to women (‘69) 1900- many states allow women to vote in local elections, own/control property after marriage Temperance Attract attention of women, urban reformers Poverty, abuse, violence, crime WCTU (1874)- Frances Willard Antisaloon League (1893)- Carry A. Nation

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