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The Growth of Cities and American Culture
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Nation of Immigrants Push vs. Pull Factors Old vs. New Immigrants The Statue of Liberty – Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, the wretched refuse of your teeming shore, send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed to me: I lift my lamp beside the golden door.
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Restrictions First: Chinese Exclusion Act 1882 Immigrants had to pass physical tests and pay an entry tax Groups against immigration – Labor unions – Nativists (American Protective Association) – Social Darwinists
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Urbanization 1900: 40% of Americans lived in cities or towns 1920: More Americans lived in urban rather than rural centers
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Look of cities Streetcars and subways Elevated railroads Bridges (Brooklyn Bridge 1883) – All allowed people to live farther away from where they worked
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Look of Cities Skyscrapers (Home insurance Company Building in Chicago=1 st skyscraper) Ethnic neighborhoods
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Suburban Growth Upper/middle class Americans move to the suburbs Opposite of Europe Why? – Abundant land – Inexpensive transportation – Low cost housing construction – Racial and ethnic prejudice – American fondness for grass, privacy, and detached homes
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Boss and Machine Politics Political bosses ran city governments Helped/managed immigrants for votes Excessive greed and corruption – Example: Tweed Ring of NYC
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Henry George Progress and Poverty – Brought attention to inequalities of wealth brought on by industrialization
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Jane Addams Founder of Hull House in Chicago – Provided social services to poor immigrants – Idea of settlement houses spread – Pushed for reforms in American society in housing, women’s rights, and child labor
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Walter Rauschenbusch Promoted Social Gospel – Application of Christian principles to social problems – Linking Christianity with Progressive reform
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Families and Women in Urban Society Divorce Rates rose Birthrate dropped 1890: Foundation of the National American Women’s Suffrage Association – Elizabeth Cady Stanton – Susan B. Anthony
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Temperance and Morality Society for the Suppression of Vice – Anthony Comstock Women’s Christian Temperance Union – Frances Willard Antisaloon League – Carry Nation
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Expansion of Education New Compulsory laws increased literacy rate to 90% of population Growth of Public Schools (early education) Higher Education Expansion – Land grant colleges under Morrill Land Grants – Philanthropy – Women’s Colleges Smith Bryn Mawr Mount Holyoke
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Richard Ely Pointed out weaknesses of laissez faire capitalism Economics could solve problems of the day
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Frederick Jackson Turner (historian) Studied dynamic process of actual human behavior and their effects on the environment
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Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. (Law) Law should evolve with the times Future Supreme Court Justice
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Clarence Darrow (Lawyer) Criminal behavior could be caused by a person’s environment of poverty, neglect, and abuse
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W.E.B. Du Bois Advocated full equal rights for blacks Talented Tenth would lead the way
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Realist Authors Mark Twain: Adventures of Huck Finn 1884 Jack London: Call of the Wild 1903 Stephen Crane: Red Badge of Courage 1895
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Art Arrangement in Grey and Black Whistler’s Mother – James McNeill Whistler
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Architecture Louis Sullivan – Chicago School Frank Lloyd Wright – Organic style Frederick Law Olmsted – Central park and U.S. Capitol Grounds
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Popular Press Joseph Pulitzer: New York World William Randolph Hearst: New York Journal – Both publications came to be known as yellow journalism Sensationalized stories not based on facts
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Amusements Explode Barnum & Bailey Circus Theaters Vaudeville Why? Gradual reduction of working hours Improved transport Advertising Decline of Victorian Views
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Spectator Sports Boxing Baseball Basketball College Football Some spectator sports were embraced by different classes – Rich: Yachting, polo – Poor: Boxing, Football
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