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Start of the Gilded Age

Start of the Gilded Age

Assessment

Presentation

Social Studies

7th - 10th Grade

Hard

Created by

Joseph Anderson

FREE Resource

13 Slides • 8 Questions

1

​The Gilded Age

American History - Soderberg

2

media

Gilding is the process of covering something relatively inexpensive (wood, metal, stone) with gold foil or paint.

​This makes it look expensive and fancy.

It is an illusion​

The Gilded Age

3

What Was The Gilded Age?

A time of growth and achievement for the U.S.

  • Industrialization

    • Factories

    • Railroads

    • Coal mining

    • Steel production

4

  • Inventions

    • Alexander Graham Bell →telephone (AT&T monopoly nicknamed “Ma Bell” / “Mother Bell”)

    • Thomas Edison →phonograph; lightbulb

    • George Eastman → Kodak camera

    • Wright Brothers →successful flight

    • Henry Ford →Model T; assembly line

5

Open Ended

How might an invention like the lightbulb impact workers in a factory?

6

media
  • After the Civil War, 12 million people come to America from around the world.

    • Not all welcomed with “open arms”

      • Immigrants expected to assimilate - “fit in” with “American” culture

7

Open Ended

What might immigrants be expected to do in order to "fit in" to American culture?

8

  • Three groups of people came together from 1870 to the early 1900s.

    • Old Immigrants

    • New Immigrants

    • Nativists

9

Old Immigrants ("Second Wave")

  • From primarily Northern and Western Europe

    • Germany, Ireland, Scandinavia

  • Protestant (Lutheran, Methodist, Baptist, Presbyterian)

  • Literate (could read and write); many spoke English

  • Came as families, had some $, worked skilled jobs

  • Assimilated

10

New Immigrants (“Third Wave”)

  • 80% from Southern and Eastern Europe

    • Italy, Russia, Poland, Austro-Hungary

  • Catholic, Orthodox, Jewish

  • Illiterate (could not read and write); few spoke English

  • Came with little $, could not speak English, unskilled labor

  • Had trouble assimilating

11

  • Nativists

    • Not from the “old” or “new” immigrant groups

      • Many traced their ancestry back to the 13 original British Colonies

    • Anti-immigration

      • Desire to preserve a “true American” identity in the U.S.

      • Formed the American Party (“Know Nothing” party)

        • Protect the rights of white, Anglo-Saxon Protestants (WASPs)

        • Feared that immigrants would threaten their social and economic standings

12

Multiple Choice

Many immigrants tried to adopt American culture.  This is known as

1

segregation

2

nativism

3

assimilation

4

ethnicity

13

Multiple Choice

Some Americans were anti-immigrant and known as

1

imperialists

2

nativists

3

industrialists

4

communists

14

  • Push Factors Drove Southern & Eastern Europeans to Leave Their Native Countries

    • Population growth in S and E Europe

    • Lack of jobs and food

    • Scarcity of Farmland

    • Mechanization of farming equipment

    • Pogroms

      • Religious persecution of Russian Jews

15

  • Pull  Factors Attracted Southern & Eastern Europeans to America

    • Democracy

    • Freedom of religion

    • Available land

    • Economic opportunity

      • Steel and railroad industries advertised for workers in Europe

16

Multiple Choice

Which of the following was PULL factor for immigration?

1

free land

2

religious persecution

3

poverty

4

overpopulation

17

Multiple Choice

Which of the following is probably NOT a reason for increased immigration?

1

Better opportunities

2

Religious

freedom

3

Political persecution

4

Harsh travel

18

Tenement Buildings in the Gilded Age

  • Cities scrambled to house immigrant families

    • Most new immigrants arrived at Ellis Island (NYC) and stayed in the urban centers (cities) on the East Coast

  • Tenement buildings

    • high-rise apartments (5-7 stories)

      • Constructed quickly & cheaply

      • Not well lit or ventilated

      • No indoor plumbing

      • The rapid spread of disease and building fires were a hazard

19

  • By 1900, ⅔ of New York City’s population lived in tenements

    • The Lower East Side had 350,000 people per square mile

      • Families stacked on top of each other in tenements that were built on lots that measured 25’ x 100’

    • The people inhabiting these buildings were not rich or powerful

      • Most of them were European immigrants and poor laborers who could not afford to move to a better area of the city

20

Multiple Choice

Many immigrants lived in urban apartment slums called

1

high-rises

2

suburbs

3

tenements

4

studi

21

Open Ended

Why do you think this era in American history is referred to as "The Gilded Age"?

​The Gilded Age

American History - Soderberg

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