urbanization. rural to urban shift by 1900, 40% of americans lived in cities, by 1920 it was 50%...

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URBANIZATION

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Page 1: URBANIZATION. Rural to Urban Shift By 1900, 40% of Americans lived in cities, by 1920 it was 50% Push Factors Farm technology meant needing less farmers

URBANIZATION

Page 2: URBANIZATION. Rural to Urban Shift By 1900, 40% of Americans lived in cities, by 1920 it was 50% Push Factors Farm technology meant needing less farmers

Rural to Urban Shift• By 1900, 40% of Americans lived in cities, by 1920 it was 50%

• Push Factors• Farm technology meant needing less farmers• Poverty of immigrants from other countries

• Pull Factors• Availability of jobs• Lure of the cities

• Great Migration (Black Nadir/Diaspora)• Between 1890 and 1930, over 1 million southern Blacks moved to

northern cities. Large numbers during World War I for jobs.

Page 3: URBANIZATION. Rural to Urban Shift By 1900, 40% of Americans lived in cities, by 1920 it was 50% Push Factors Farm technology meant needing less farmers

City Changes• Skyscrapers – impact of safety elevator and steel frames

• Transportation improvements – streetcars, subways, electric trolleys, elevated railways, and bridges

• Sanitation problems – waste, disease, pollution (as public services could not keep up with increase)

• Fire and Crime problems – (Chicago and Boston fires 1871)

Page 4: URBANIZATION. Rural to Urban Shift By 1900, 40% of Americans lived in cities, by 1920 it was 50% Push Factors Farm technology meant needing less farmers

Leisure Activities• Dance Halls, Social Clubs (Ethnic), Concert Halls

• Charity Girls• Vaudeville entertainment acts• Fraternal Organizations (Elks, Moose)• Pubs

• Amusement Parks• Coney Island

• Shopping• Chain Stores / Department Stores• Marshall Fields in Chicago• Macys in NY• Tea Rooms

Page 5: URBANIZATION. Rural to Urban Shift By 1900, 40% of Americans lived in cities, by 1920 it was 50% Push Factors Farm technology meant needing less farmers

New Sports and Entertainment

• Theater – Vaudeville and “Movie Palaces”• 1st Silent movie – Great Train Robbery

• Music• Ragtime (Scott Joplin)

• Sports• “new” sports of baseball, basketball (Dr. Naismith)• Biking, tennis, golf growth• NCAA – football, crew, swimming track

Page 6: URBANIZATION. Rural to Urban Shift By 1900, 40% of Americans lived in cities, by 1920 it was 50% Push Factors Farm technology meant needing less farmers

Print Entertainment• Newspaper growth

• Cheaper, and more widely read by masses• Yellow Journalism – sensationalism of news

• William Randolph Hearst• Joseph Pulitzer

• Magazines• Beginning of muckrakers• Ladies Home Journal (Edward Bok)• Harper’s Weekly (Thomas Nast)

• Dime Novels• Realism: Alger, Twain, Stephen Crane• William Dean Howells – described shallowness of Americans• Theodore Dreiser – Sister Carrie (showed plight of single women in cities)

Page 7: URBANIZATION. Rural to Urban Shift By 1900, 40% of Americans lived in cities, by 1920 it was 50% Push Factors Farm technology meant needing less farmers

Consumer changes• More people bought “store-bought” clothing (sewing machine effect)• More Canned goods (meat-packing and steel effects)

• Shopping became a “fun” activity of middle class• Department Stores (Macys, MF), Tea Rooms

• Mail Order Catalogs for rural areas (Sears, Mont. Ward)

• Increased Advertising and Mass Marketing

Page 8: URBANIZATION. Rural to Urban Shift By 1900, 40% of Americans lived in cities, by 1920 it was 50% Push Factors Farm technology meant needing less farmers

Education Changes in late 1800s• Expansion of Public Schools

• Americanization of Immigrants• Dawes Act effect (Carlisle School for Indians)• More mandatory schooling for younger ages

• Expansion of Colleges and Technical Schools• Gospel of Wealth effect (Vanderbilt, Stanford, Stetson)• Morrill Land Grant Colleges• Growth of Women’s College (Mt. Holyoke and “sister schools”)

Page 9: URBANIZATION. Rural to Urban Shift By 1900, 40% of Americans lived in cities, by 1920 it was 50% Push Factors Farm technology meant needing less farmers

Late 1800s society• Victorian Age

• For many of the middle and upper classes the idea of being proper

• Many worked for temperance and moral laws.

• Compare the “proper” and “common” classes (Charity girls)

• Growth of the Middle Class• “Vacations” become more common

(using trains and Pullman Sleepers)

• Effect on woman?• Victorian architecture and suburbs

Page 10: URBANIZATION. Rural to Urban Shift By 1900, 40% of Americans lived in cities, by 1920 it was 50% Push Factors Farm technology meant needing less farmers

Misc. Late 1800s

• Biggest holiday shared by all – 4th of July

• Chautauqua Movement• Middle and upper classes• Many in vacation-type resorts• Lectures on literary, scientific, and

theological subjects• Helped to spread Social Gospel idea

and Progressive movement

Page 11: URBANIZATION. Rural to Urban Shift By 1900, 40% of Americans lived in cities, by 1920 it was 50% Push Factors Farm technology meant needing less farmers

Urban Poor• Ethnic Communities• Tenements

• Dumbbell Apartments

• Plight shown by Muckrakers• Jacob Riis How the Other Half Lives

Page 12: URBANIZATION. Rural to Urban Shift By 1900, 40% of Americans lived in cities, by 1920 it was 50% Push Factors Farm technology meant needing less farmers

Social Gospel Movement• Social Gospel – concerned with the social and economic injustices

• Biggest group – White, Middle-class, Protestant women

• Salvation Army started in 1879 to help homeless and hungry

• Settlement Houses• Wanted to change “unhealthy environment” • Tried to combat ignorance, poverty, crime• Most famous – Hull House led by Jane Addams (Chicago)

Page 13: URBANIZATION. Rural to Urban Shift By 1900, 40% of Americans lived in cities, by 1920 it was 50% Push Factors Farm technology meant needing less farmers

City Beautiful Movement• One of the ideas of clearing away slums• Gospel of Wealth – help in adding of Concert Halls,

Museums, Libraries and other “cultural” aspects

• Frederick Law Olmstead – designer of Central Park

Page 14: URBANIZATION. Rural to Urban Shift By 1900, 40% of Americans lived in cities, by 1920 it was 50% Push Factors Farm technology meant needing less farmers

Women Movements• More Education opportunities• Many in new Social Science fields• Involved in many movements

• Temperance• WCTU – Woman's Christian Temperance Union• Frances Willard• Carrie Nation

• Suffrage• Susan B. Anthony

• Settlement House• Jane Addams

• Labor• (Mother) Mary Jones

Page 15: URBANIZATION. Rural to Urban Shift By 1900, 40% of Americans lived in cities, by 1920 it was 50% Push Factors Farm technology meant needing less farmers

Reflection Questions• How was the growth of leisure activities and entertainment

a contradiction of Victorian ideals?• What was the impact of middle class women on various

aspects of urban life?• What were the reasons so many came to the cities and

what did they face once they arrived?• What changes to urban life from the late 1800s do we still

see today?

Page 16: URBANIZATION. Rural to Urban Shift By 1900, 40% of Americans lived in cities, by 1920 it was 50% Push Factors Farm technology meant needing less farmers

Links• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N_LS1hrWXW0 –

urbanization• http://www.history.com/topics/tenements - tenements• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SZl4KXsaKVE – Riis

photo slideshow• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UH56uswMaJg – urban

life, entertainment in late 1800s• http://

www.youtube.com/watch?v=vzT8EqhuYxA&feature=related – tenement life slideshow