

Start of the Gilded Age
Presentation
•
Social Studies
•
7th - 10th Grade
•
Hard
Joseph Anderson
FREE Resource
13 Slides • 8 Questions
1
The Gilded Age
American History - Soderberg
2
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
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
segregation
nativism
assimilation
ethnicity
13
Multiple Choice
Some Americans were anti-immigrant and known as
imperialists
nativists
industrialists
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?
free land
religious persecution
poverty
overpopulation
17
Multiple Choice
Which of the following is probably NOT a reason for increased immigration?
Better opportunities
Religious
freedom
Political persecution
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
high-rises
suburbs
tenements
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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