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John m. Murrin, et al. Liberty, Equality, Power A History of the American People Chapter 20 An Industrial Society, 1900-1920

John m. Murrin, et al. Liberty, Equality, Power A History of the American People

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John m. Murrin, et al. Liberty, Equality, Power A History of the American People. Chapter 20 An Industrial Society, 1900-1920. Scientific Management. Fredrick Taylor Focused on the productivity of the individual worker ‘ One best way ’ to perform every task. Mass Production. Assembly Line. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: John m. Murrin, et al. Liberty, Equality, Power A History of the American People

John m. Murrin, et al.

Liberty, Equality, PowerA History of the American People

Chapter 20

An Industrial Society, 1900-1920

Page 2: John m. Murrin, et al. Liberty, Equality, Power A History of the American People

Scientific ManagementFredrick Taylor

Focused on the productivity of the individual worker

‘One best way’ to perform every task

Page 3: John m. Murrin, et al. Liberty, Equality, Power A History of the American People

Assembly Line

Henry Ford

Mass Production

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Automobile Changes America Economic Impact

Direct Employment in industry Raw materials and suppliers Support industries 10% of GDP today

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Automobile Changes America Social Impact

Mobility & Freedom Demographic Changes

Interstate migration Suburbanization

1 Million Dead = 1951 “House of Prostitution

on Wheels”

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Eugenics

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William M. “Boss” Tweed

Political Machines Unofficial city organization

designed to keep a particular party (mostly Democratic) or group in power

Offered support (social) services to immigrant groups

Corrupt – politics for profit Example: Tammany Hall in

NYC – Run by Boss Tweed Thomas Nast – Influential

cartoonist attacking political machines and other ‘corrupt’ influences

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Labor UnionsAmerican Federation of Labor (AFL) Industrial Workers of the World (IWW)

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Ludlow Massacre

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Population shift – 4 of 10 lived in cities

Segregation by race and class

Offered diversity unseen before

The Urban Frontier

Page 17: John m. Murrin, et al. Liberty, Equality, Power A History of the American People

Top 10 Cities of the Year 1000

Name Population

1 Cordova, Spain 450,000

2 Kaifeng, China 400,000

3 Constantinople (Istanbul), Turkey 300,000

4 Angkor, Cambodia 200,000

5 Kyoto, Japan 175,000

6 Cairo, Egypt 135,000

7 Baghdad, Iraq 125,000

8 Nishapur (Neyshabur), Iran 125,000

9 Al-Hasa, Saudi Arabia 110,000

10 Patan (Anhilwara), India 100,000

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Top 10 Cities of the Year 1500

Name Population

1 Beijing, China 672,000

2 Vijayanagar, India 500,000

3 Cairo, Egypt 400,000

4 Hangzhou, China 250,000

5 Tabriz, Iran 250,000

6 Constantinople (Istanbul), Turkey 200,000

7 Gaur, India 200,000

8 Paris, France 185,000

9 Guangzhou, China 150,000

10 Nanjing, China 147,000

Page 19: John m. Murrin, et al. Liberty, Equality, Power A History of the American People

Top 10 Cities of the Year 1800

Name Population

1 Beijing, China 1,100,000

2 London, United Kingdom 861,000

3 Guangzhou, China 800,000

4 Edo (Tokyo), Japan 685,000

5 Constantinople (Istanbul), Turkey 570,000

6 Paris, France 547,000

7 Naples, Italy 430,000

8 Hangzhou, China 387,000

9 Osaka, Japan 383,000

10 Kyoto, Japan 377,000

Page 20: John m. Murrin, et al. Liberty, Equality, Power A History of the American People

Top 10 Cities of the Year 1900

Name Population

1 London, United Kingdom 6,480,000

2 New York, United States 4,242,000

3 Paris, France 3,330,000

4 Berlin, Germany 2,707,000

5 Chicago, United States 1,717,000

6 Vienna, Austria 1,698,000

7 Tokyo, Japan 1,497,000

8 St. Petersburg, Russia 1,439,000

9 Manchester, United Kingdom 1,435,000

10 Philadelphia, United States 1,418,000

Page 21: John m. Murrin, et al. Liberty, Equality, Power A History of the American People

Top 10 Cities of the Year 1950

Name Population

1 New York, United States 12,463,000

2 London, United Kingdom 8,860,000

3 Tokyo, Japan 7,000,000

4 Paris, France 5,900,000

5 Shanghai, China 5,406,000

6 Moscow, Russia 5,100,000

7 Buenos Aires, Argentina 5,000,000

8 Chicago, United States 4,906,000

9 Ruhr, Germany 4,900,000

10 Kolkata, India 4,800,000

Page 22: John m. Murrin, et al. Liberty, Equality, Power A History of the American People

Top 10 Cities of the Year 2000

Name Population

1 Tokoyo, Japan 26,400,000

2 Mumbai, India 18,100,000

Mexico City, Mexico 18,100,000

4 Sao Paulo, Brazil 17,800,000

5 New York, USA 16,600,000

6 Lagos, Nigeria 13,400,000

7 Los Angeles, USA 13,100,000

8 Shanghai, China 12,900,000

Kolkata, India 12,900,000

10 Buenos Aires, Argentina 12,600,000

Page 23: John m. Murrin, et al. Liberty, Equality, Power A History of the American People

Problems of Urban LifeCrime Impure waterUncollected garbageAnimal wasteDiseaseOver crowding

Page 24: John m. Murrin, et al. Liberty, Equality, Power A History of the American People

Dumbbell TenementsArchitecture contributed to

urban problems

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Jacob Riis, 1914

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New Immigration From Southern and

Eastern Europe Not Protestant

(Catholic and Orthodox) and Jewish

Most did not know English or illiterate & no industrial skills

Used to more authoritarian governments

More difficult to unionize

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“Little Italy” Mulberry Street, Manhattan, NYC circa 1900

The Immigrant Experience Ethnic Neighborhoods: areas in cities where immigrants settled

with others from the ‘old country’ to ease transition and preserve heritage

Page 33: John m. Murrin, et al. Liberty, Equality, Power A History of the American People
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The Immigrant Experience Employment –

menial labor or manufacturing found either through political machines or ethnic connections

Standard of living – low by US standards, but better than impoverished conditions in European cities

Page 35: John m. Murrin, et al. Liberty, Equality, Power A History of the American People

The Immigrant ExperienceTriangle Shirtwaist Fire (1911)

Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Building (New York) March 25, 1911. Fighting the Fire

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www.authentichistory.com

• Select “Early 1900s” tab on the left• Select “Survivor Accounts & Victim List”

Listen to two survivor accounts of the Triangle Shirtwaist Company Fire.

Read over the “List of Victims” & make three general demographic observations about the victims based on the information provided

Page 40: John m. Murrin, et al. Liberty, Equality, Power A History of the American People

Reaction All levels of government (except local)

ignored immigrants plight Political Machines – helped immigrants

in return for votes Some churches preached the ‘Social

Gospel’ – others reflected the wealth and conservatism of its members

Settlement Houses Community center / boarding house to aid

immigrants Hull House – Chicago (1889) Jane Adams

The Immigrant Experience

Page 41: John m. Murrin, et al. Liberty, Equality, Power A History of the American People

Reaction American Protective Association

Nativists & Labor Union Support Immigration Restrictions based on:

nationality, literacy tests, paupers, criminals, insane, polygamists, prostitutes, alcoholics, anarchists, people, carrying contagious diseases

The Immigrant Experience

Page 42: John m. Murrin, et al. Liberty, Equality, Power A History of the American People

Religion & New ImmigrationNew Numbers

150 religious denominations in 1890 Salvation Army & Christian Science Catholics top other denominations in

attendance YMCA / YWCA Darwinism

Lasting legacy

Page 43: John m. Murrin, et al. Liberty, Equality, Power A History of the American People
Page 44: John m. Murrin, et al. Liberty, Equality, Power A History of the American People

Contemporary Religious Diversity 81% of American adults identify themselves with a specific religion:

76.5% (159 million) of Americans identify themselves as Christian. This is a major slide from 86.2% in 1990. Identification with Christianity has suffered a loss of 9.7 percentage points in 11 years -- about 0.9 percentage points per year. This decline is identical to that observed in Canada between 1981 and 2001. If this trend has continued, then:

at the present time (2007-MAY), only 71% of American adults consider themselves Christians

The percentage will dip below 70% in 2008 By about the year 2042, non-Christians will outnumber the Christians in the U.S.

52% of Americans identified themselves as Protestant. 24.5% are Roman Catholic. 1.3% are Jewish. 0.5% are Muslim, followers of Islam.

14.1% do not follow any organized religion. This is an unusually rapid increase -- almost a doubling -- from only 8% in 1990. There are more Americans who say they are not affiliated with any organized religion than there are Episcopalians, Methodists, and Lutherans taken together.

The unaffiliated vary from a low of 3% in North Dakota to 25% in Washington. "The six states with the highest percentage of people saying they have no religion are all Western states, with the exception of Vermont at 22%." 

Page 45: John m. Murrin, et al. Liberty, Equality, Power A History of the American People

Education Compulsory elementary education in many states Normal (teacher) schools established Segregated Universities – HBU’s

Howard, Clark, Atlanta, Morehouse, Southern, Grambling Private Universities related to Robber Barons

(oops… I mean Captains of Industry) Duke, Stanford, Carnegie Melon, Cornell, Vanderbilt, Chicago

Johns Hopkins – first ‘world class’ graduate program Changing curriculum @ universities Morril Act (1862)

states given federal lands to sell and establish agricultural colleges

Page 46: John m. Murrin, et al. Liberty, Equality, Power A History of the American People

Women & The Gilded Age Increase in divorce & use of birth control More women working & voting (Wyoming) Comstock Law – allowed confiscation of ‘obscene material’ Urbanization and the family Margaret Sanger Charlotte Gilman – feminist and author

Women and Economics & The Yellow Wallpaper

Page 47: John m. Murrin, et al. Liberty, Equality, Power A History of the American People

National American Women Suffrage Association Elizabeth Cady Stanton & Susan B.

Anthony Antilynching campaign

Ida B. Wells National Prohibition Party & Woman’s

Christian Temperance Union Carrie Nation

American Red Cross Clara Barton

                                 

Carrie Nation

Women & The Gilded Age

Page 48: John m. Murrin, et al. Liberty, Equality, Power A History of the American People

Tudor

CraftsmanRichardsonian

Victorian Gothic Queen Anne

Architecture

Page 49: John m. Murrin, et al. Liberty, Equality, Power A History of the American People

Brooklyn Bridge

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"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-tost to me, I lift my lamp beside the golden door“

"The New Colossus" by Emma Lazarus (on pedestal of statue)

Statue of Liberty