Chapter 19 Immigration, Urbanization, and Everyday Life, 1860-1900

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Chapter 19 Immigration, Urbanization, and Everyday Life, 1860-1900

AP US History Chapter 19 – Immigration, Urbanization, and Everyday Life, 1860-1900

Identifications: After reading Chapter 19, you should be able to identify and explain the historical significance of each of the following:

Urbanization Anthony Comstock Push/pull Factors Charles Parkhurst “old immigrants” The Social Gospel/Washington Gladden “new immigrants” Walter Rauschenbusch Castle Garden Settlement House Movement Ellis Island Jane Addams/Hull House Angel Island Florence Kelley Slums/ghettos/ethnic neighborhoods Saloons 5th Avenue, NY Professional sports of the Gilded Age Commonwealth Avenue, Boston Vaudeville Victorian morality Coney Island Catharine Beecher Dance Halls The Cult of Domesticity Ragtime/Scott Joplin Rowland H. Macy Charles E. Norton John Wanamaker E.L. Godkin Marshall Field Stephen Crane Leland Stanford Mark Twain Political boss/machine/ward captain Theodore Dreiser Boss William M. Tweed W.E.B. DuBois Thomas Nast Thorstein Veblen Jacob Riis Frank Lloyd Wright Tammany Hall Winslow Homer Robert Hartley Woman’s Christian Temperance Union Charles Loring Brace General Federation of Women’s Clubs Young Men’s Christian Association “New Woman”/Charlotte Perkins Salvation Army Gilman Charity Organization Society William Torrey Harris

Thought Questions:

1. Discuss the Victorian genteel tradition and evaluate the effectiveness of the writers, painters, architects, and social scientists who broke it.

2. Analyze the impact of immigration on the urban scene and industrialization from 1860- 1900.

3. Discuss the advantages and disadvantages of urban political machines during the Gilded Age.

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