SlideShare una empresa de Scribd logo
1 de 17
Cities During
Industrialization

• Business and industrialization centered on the cities. The increasing
number of factories created a need for labor, convincing people in
rural areas to move to the city, and drawing immigrants from Europe
to the United States. As a result, the United States transformed from
a farming to an urban nation.
Immigration
• Roughly 10 million European immigrants
settled in the U.S. between 1860 and 1890.
• The transition to American life was
difficult for immigrants. They lived in
dirty, crowded conditions in tenements.
Tenements had few windows, limited
plumbing and electricity, and tiny rooms
often packed with people. People living in
the tenements experienced disease, high
infant mortality, and high levels of
pollution.
• Immigrants, also faced discrimination in
the workplace from native workers who
resented the immigrants’ willingness to
accept lower wages and work in worse
conditions.
Why did Political Bosses
Emerge?
Chicago, 1890

• Populations in major cities such
as New York and Philadelphia
doubled, and in the case of
Chicago quadrupled, due to the
migration of farmers and
immigrants.
• Municipal (city) governments
were unprepared to handle the
population growth of cities.
Many city governments took a
laissez-faire (hands-off)
approach. For example, systems
for sanitation, sewer, roads, etc.
were not built for populations
that large.

• Political bosses took advantage of the situation for their own political gain.
Political Machines
• Local politics during this era were marked by “machine politics”,
because the system and the party, rather than individuals, held
power.
• In virtually every region of the U.S., local officials, or “machines,”
bribed people, especially immigrants, for votes by providing political
and economic benefits such as offices, jobs, and city contracts.
• “Machines” were presided over by “party bosses,” professional
politicians who dominated city government. These bosses often
controlled the jobs of thousands of city workers and influenced the
activities of schools, hospitals, and other city-run services.
• Machine politics thrived on corruption, which contributed to the
system’s collapse around the turn of the twentieth century.
Political Machines
(cont)
• In U.S. politics, a political organization that controls enough votes to
maintain political and administrative control of its community.

• The rapid growth of cities in the 19th century created huge problems
for city governments, which were often poorly organized and unable
to provide services.
• Enterprising politicians were able to win support by offering favors,
including patronage jobs and housing, (BETTERING URBAN
INFRASTRUCTURE) in exchange for votes.
• Though machines often helped to restructure city governments to the
benefit of their constituents, they just as often resulted in poorer
service (when jobs were doled out as political rewards), corruption
(when contracts or concessions were awarded in return for
kickbacks), and aggravation of racial or ethnic hostilities (when the
machine did not reflect the city's diversity).
• Reforms, suburban flight, and a more mobile population with fewer
ties to city neighborhoods have weakened machine politics.
Operations of
Political Machines
• "What tells in holdin' your grip on your district is to go right down
among the poor families and help them in the different ways they
need help. I've got a regular system for this. If there's a fire in Ninth,
Tenth, or Eleventh Avenue, for example, any hour of the day or
night, I'm usually there with some of my election district captains as
soon as the fire engines. If a family is burned out, I don't ask whether
they are Republicans or Democrats, and I don't refer them to the
Charity Organization Society, which would investigate their case in a
month or two and decide they were worthy of help about the time
they are dead from starvation. I just get quarters for them, buy clothes
for them if their clothes were burned up, and fix them up till they get
things runnin' again. It's philanthropy, but it's politics, too – mighty
good politics. Who can tell how many votes one of these fires bring
me? The poor are the most grateful people in the world, and, let me
tell you, they have more friends in their neighborhoods than the rich
have in theirs.”
- George Washington Plunkitt
Example of a
Political Machine
Tammany Hall, located at Fourth Avenue and East 17th
Street in New York City, ca. 1943.
Tammany Hall
• Tammany Hall was the name given to
the Democratic political machine that
dominated New York City politics from
the 1854 through the election of
LaGuardia in 1934.
• The Tammany Society of New York
City was founded in 1786 as a fraternal
organization whose primary activities
were social. By 1798, however, the
society's activities had grown
increasingly politicized. Eventually
Tammany emerged as the central
supporter of Jeffersonian policies in the
city of New York.
Tammany Hall (cont.)
• Throughout the 1830s and 1840s, the society expanded its
political control even further by earning the loyalty of the
city's ever-expanding immigrant community.
• The society helped newly arrived foreigners obtain jobs,
find a place to live, and even earn citizenship so that they
could vote for Tammany candidates in city and state
elections.
• William M. "Boss" Tweed was a famous political boss of
Tammany Hall. His corrupt reign led to an attempt at
reform in the early 1870s.
Thomas Nast
was the most
important
political
cartoonist in
19th-century
America, known
for exposing
government
corruption.
The ‘Brains.’
The Boss.
-‘Well, what
are you going
to do about
it?’” Harper’s
Weekly,
October 21,
1871, page
992.

Taken from http://www.lib.ohio-state.edu/cgaweb/nast/keller
Positive Aspects of
Political Bosses
• Political bosses ran a “welfare state” for urban poor. They helped the
unemployed find jobs, provided food and coal to widows, and organized
entertainment in neighborhoods. All of these items were contingent
upon the poor voting for the political machine’s candidate.

• Who benefited?
• Immigrants, working poor
• Political bosses gained political power

• Improvements in Infrastructure
• Public Libraries- world’s largest in Boston
• Brooklyn Bridge and Central Park- New York City
• 660 miles of water lines; 464 miles of sewer lines; 1,800 miles of paved
streets
Why don’t we have
Political Bosses today?
• No place for them in cities that are more organized and
well planned out to handle large populations.

• No huge waves of immigrants all at one time.
Assignment
• You are working in the campaign office for a political machine.
Either you or someone you work for is running for a political
office. Create a campaign flyer for the local candidate (or
yourself). Remember who you are trying to target with your
advertising and what types of incentives you can offer them for
voting. What can you offer that would allow this group of
people to consider voting for you. Include slogans, logos,
pictures, the office, name of candidate, and other items for your
campaign ad.
• Use Microsoft Publisher to create your flyer. When you save the
flyer, save it as your last name and as a “jpeg”. You will upload
this file to the website when you are finished.
• When finished with you ad, write a ½ page response of how
your campaign ad would be different if you were running for a
political office today. How would it be similar? Explain

Más contenido relacionado

La actualidad más candente

Cities social issues
Cities social issuesCities social issues
Cities social issues
dwessler
 
Movements toward independence
Movements toward independenceMovements toward independence
Movements toward independence
Veeshalla100
 
Women’s liberation movement pp
Women’s liberation movement ppWomen’s liberation movement pp
Women’s liberation movement pp
Lunsford97
 
Women and Media presentation
Women and Media presentationWomen and Media presentation
Women and Media presentation
cmartens2011
 

La actualidad más candente (20)

Consumer culture
Consumer cultureConsumer culture
Consumer culture
 
Boston Institute for Nonprofit Journalism
Boston Institute for Nonprofit JournalismBoston Institute for Nonprofit Journalism
Boston Institute for Nonprofit Journalism
 
Cities social issues
Cities social issuesCities social issues
Cities social issues
 
Great Depression
Great DepressionGreat Depression
Great Depression
 
What Is The Third World?
What Is The Third World?What Is The Third World?
What Is The Third World?
 
Comparing Post-Colonial 19c Americas
Comparing Post-Colonial 19c AmericasComparing Post-Colonial 19c Americas
Comparing Post-Colonial 19c Americas
 
Strange Bedfellows: Nativism, Know-Nothings, African-Americans & School Deseg...
Strange Bedfellows: Nativism, Know-Nothings, African-Americans & School Deseg...Strange Bedfellows: Nativism, Know-Nothings, African-Americans & School Deseg...
Strange Bedfellows: Nativism, Know-Nothings, African-Americans & School Deseg...
 
Post suffrage
Post suffragePost suffrage
Post suffrage
 
Birth control
Birth controlBirth control
Birth control
 
Classical urban sociological theories
Classical urban sociological theoriesClassical urban sociological theories
Classical urban sociological theories
 
Ap age of the city
Ap age of the cityAp age of the city
Ap age of the city
 
Movements toward independence
Movements toward independenceMovements toward independence
Movements toward independence
 
Women’s liberation movement pp
Women’s liberation movement ppWomen’s liberation movement pp
Women’s liberation movement pp
 
Ap age of the city
Ap age of the cityAp age of the city
Ap age of the city
 
The big problem’s name is capitalism, not globalization
The big problem’s name is capitalism, not globalizationThe big problem’s name is capitalism, not globalization
The big problem’s name is capitalism, not globalization
 
Women’s rights
Women’s rightsWomen’s rights
Women’s rights
 
Women in Media Industry
Women in Media IndustryWomen in Media Industry
Women in Media Industry
 
Gilded age part 1 a
Gilded age part 1 aGilded age part 1 a
Gilded age part 1 a
 
His 122 ch 25 fall 2013
His 122 ch 25 fall 2013His 122 ch 25 fall 2013
His 122 ch 25 fall 2013
 
Women and Media presentation
Women and Media presentationWomen and Media presentation
Women and Media presentation
 

Similar a 20 whose the_boss

Chapter 6 lecture notes
Chapter 6 lecture notesChapter 6 lecture notes
Chapter 6 lecture notes
mrsstrong-clay
 
Gilded age and politics
Gilded age and politicsGilded age and politics
Gilded age and politics
mrsstrong-clay
 
3.23.23 The Chicago Freedom Movement and Urban Uprisings.pptx
3.23.23 The Chicago Freedom Movement and Urban Uprisings.pptx3.23.23 The Chicago Freedom Movement and Urban Uprisings.pptx
3.23.23 The Chicago Freedom Movement and Urban Uprisings.pptx
MaryPotorti1
 
3.19.24 Urban Uprisings and the Chicago Freedom Movement.pptx
3.19.24 Urban Uprisings and the Chicago Freedom Movement.pptx3.19.24 Urban Uprisings and the Chicago Freedom Movement.pptx
3.19.24 Urban Uprisings and the Chicago Freedom Movement.pptx
mary850239
 
Chapter 7 immigration review sections 1 3 [autosaved]
Chapter 7 immigration review sections 1 3 [autosaved]Chapter 7 immigration review sections 1 3 [autosaved]
Chapter 7 immigration review sections 1 3 [autosaved]
Heidi Rosenberger-Lewis
 
(4) the progressive era
(4) the progressive era(4) the progressive era
(4) the progressive era
reghistory
 
Politics in the Gilded Age
Politics in the Gilded AgePolitics in the Gilded Age
Politics in the Gilded Age
reghistory
 
One of the central stories of American history has been the settleme.pdf
One of the central stories of American history has been the settleme.pdfOne of the central stories of American history has been the settleme.pdf
One of the central stories of American history has been the settleme.pdf
malavshah9013
 
Economic, Social, And Political Problems In The Post-Civil...
Economic, Social, And Political Problems In The Post-Civil...Economic, Social, And Political Problems In The Post-Civil...
Economic, Social, And Political Problems In The Post-Civil...
Kristi Anderson
 
10 urban imm gilded age
10 urban imm gilded age10 urban imm gilded age
10 urban imm gilded age
stacey12130
 
Ways of the World
Ways of the WorldWays of the World
Ways of the World
dstewart14
 

Similar a 20 whose the_boss (20)

Progressives 1
Progressives 1Progressives 1
Progressives 1
 
Advantages Of Populism
Advantages Of PopulismAdvantages Of Populism
Advantages Of Populism
 
Topic 8 urbanazation Industrial Revolution
Topic 8 urbanazation Industrial RevolutionTopic 8 urbanazation Industrial Revolution
Topic 8 urbanazation Industrial Revolution
 
Chapter 6 lecture notes
Chapter 6 lecture notesChapter 6 lecture notes
Chapter 6 lecture notes
 
Gilded age and politics
Gilded age and politicsGilded age and politics
Gilded age and politics
 
3.23.23 The Chicago Freedom Movement and Urban Uprisings.pptx
3.23.23 The Chicago Freedom Movement and Urban Uprisings.pptx3.23.23 The Chicago Freedom Movement and Urban Uprisings.pptx
3.23.23 The Chicago Freedom Movement and Urban Uprisings.pptx
 
3.19.24 Urban Uprisings and the Chicago Freedom Movement.pptx
3.19.24 Urban Uprisings and the Chicago Freedom Movement.pptx3.19.24 Urban Uprisings and the Chicago Freedom Movement.pptx
3.19.24 Urban Uprisings and the Chicago Freedom Movement.pptx
 
Chapter 7 immigration review sections 1 3 [autosaved]
Chapter 7 immigration review sections 1 3 [autosaved]Chapter 7 immigration review sections 1 3 [autosaved]
Chapter 7 immigration review sections 1 3 [autosaved]
 
(4) the progressive era
(4) the progressive era(4) the progressive era
(4) the progressive era
 
Staar 04 the progressive era1
Staar 04 the progressive era1Staar 04 the progressive era1
Staar 04 the progressive era1
 
unit 2b political machines .ppt
unit 2b political machines .pptunit 2b political machines .ppt
unit 2b political machines .ppt
 
Politics in the Gilded Age
Politics in the Gilded AgePolitics in the Gilded Age
Politics in the Gilded Age
 
One of the central stories of American history has been the settleme.pdf
One of the central stories of American history has been the settleme.pdfOne of the central stories of American history has been the settleme.pdf
One of the central stories of American history has been the settleme.pdf
 
Teacher Notes MODULE 13.pptx
Teacher Notes MODULE 13.pptxTeacher Notes MODULE 13.pptx
Teacher Notes MODULE 13.pptx
 
Economic, Social, And Political Problems In The Post-Civil...
Economic, Social, And Political Problems In The Post-Civil...Economic, Social, And Political Problems In The Post-Civil...
Economic, Social, And Political Problems In The Post-Civil...
 
LACC Urban Geography Lecture
LACC Urban Geography LectureLACC Urban Geography Lecture
LACC Urban Geography Lecture
 
Hist 12 online depression and backlash in the wake of vietnam pdf
Hist 12 online   depression and backlash in the wake of vietnam pdfHist 12 online   depression and backlash in the wake of vietnam pdf
Hist 12 online depression and backlash in the wake of vietnam pdf
 
Chapter 19 section 2 Post-war America
Chapter 19 section 2 Post-war AmericaChapter 19 section 2 Post-war America
Chapter 19 section 2 Post-war America
 
10 urban imm gilded age
10 urban imm gilded age10 urban imm gilded age
10 urban imm gilded age
 
Ways of the World
Ways of the WorldWays of the World
Ways of the World
 

Más de Joseph Sam

Legistation changes of civil rights era
Legistation changes of civil rights eraLegistation changes of civil rights era
Legistation changes of civil rights era
Joseph Sam
 
Civil Rights Cases
Civil Rights CasesCivil Rights Cases
Civil Rights Cases
Joseph Sam
 
Civil Rights up to 1960
Civil Rights up to 1960Civil Rights up to 1960
Civil Rights up to 1960
Joseph Sam
 
WWII in Europe
WWII in EuropeWWII in Europe
WWII in Europe
Joseph Sam
 
Holocaust and Japanese Interment Camps
Holocaust and Japanese Interment CampsHolocaust and Japanese Interment Camps
Holocaust and Japanese Interment Camps
Joseph Sam
 
WWII Homefront
WWII HomefrontWWII Homefront
WWII Homefront
Joseph Sam
 

Más de Joseph Sam (20)

Chapter 3-American Values
Chapter 3-American ValuesChapter 3-American Values
Chapter 3-American Values
 
Modern leaders list bio
Modern leaders list bioModern leaders list bio
Modern leaders list bio
 
Obama presidency
Obama presidencyObama presidency
Obama presidency
 
Clinton and Bush
Clinton and BushClinton and Bush
Clinton and Bush
 
1980s to early 1990s2014
1980s to early 1990s20141980s to early 1990s2014
1980s to early 1990s2014
 
Late 1970s
Late 1970s Late 1970s
Late 1970s
 
Nixon watergate-ford
Nixon watergate-fordNixon watergate-ford
Nixon watergate-ford
 
Legistation changes of civil rights era
Legistation changes of civil rights eraLegistation changes of civil rights era
Legistation changes of civil rights era
 
Civil Rights Cases
Civil Rights CasesCivil Rights Cases
Civil Rights Cases
 
Civil Rights up to 1960
Civil Rights up to 1960Civil Rights up to 1960
Civil Rights up to 1960
 
McCarthyism
McCarthyismMcCarthyism
McCarthyism
 
Korean War
Korean WarKorean War
Korean War
 
Start of the Cold War
Start of the Cold WarStart of the Cold War
Start of the Cold War
 
WWII in the Pacific
WWII in the PacificWWII in the Pacific
WWII in the Pacific
 
WWII in Europe
WWII in EuropeWWII in Europe
WWII in Europe
 
Holocaust and Japanese Interment Camps
Holocaust and Japanese Interment CampsHolocaust and Japanese Interment Camps
Holocaust and Japanese Interment Camps
 
WWII Homefront
WWII HomefrontWWII Homefront
WWII Homefront
 
Vietnam War Overview
Vietnam War OverviewVietnam War Overview
Vietnam War Overview
 
3rd Six Weeks Review
3rd Six Weeks Review3rd Six Weeks Review
3rd Six Weeks Review
 
Seeds of World War II
Seeds of World War IISeeds of World War II
Seeds of World War II
 

Último

Powerful Love Spells in Phoenix, AZ (310) 882-6330 Bring Back Lost Lover
Powerful Love Spells in Phoenix, AZ (310) 882-6330 Bring Back Lost LoverPowerful Love Spells in Phoenix, AZ (310) 882-6330 Bring Back Lost Lover
Powerful Love Spells in Phoenix, AZ (310) 882-6330 Bring Back Lost Lover
PsychicRuben LoveSpells
 
₹5.5k {Cash Payment} Independent Greater Noida Call Girls In [Delhi INAYA] 🔝|...
₹5.5k {Cash Payment} Independent Greater Noida Call Girls In [Delhi INAYA] 🔝|...₹5.5k {Cash Payment} Independent Greater Noida Call Girls In [Delhi INAYA] 🔝|...
₹5.5k {Cash Payment} Independent Greater Noida Call Girls In [Delhi INAYA] 🔝|...
Diya Sharma
 

Último (20)

America Is the Target; Israel Is the Front Line _ Andy Blumenthal _ The Blogs...
America Is the Target; Israel Is the Front Line _ Andy Blumenthal _ The Blogs...America Is the Target; Israel Is the Front Line _ Andy Blumenthal _ The Blogs...
America Is the Target; Israel Is the Front Line _ Andy Blumenthal _ The Blogs...
 
Gujarat-SEBCs.pdf pfpkoopapriorjfperjreie
Gujarat-SEBCs.pdf pfpkoopapriorjfperjreieGujarat-SEBCs.pdf pfpkoopapriorjfperjreie
Gujarat-SEBCs.pdf pfpkoopapriorjfperjreie
 
Transformative Leadership: N Chandrababu Naidu and TDP's Vision for Innovatio...
Transformative Leadership: N Chandrababu Naidu and TDP's Vision for Innovatio...Transformative Leadership: N Chandrababu Naidu and TDP's Vision for Innovatio...
Transformative Leadership: N Chandrababu Naidu and TDP's Vision for Innovatio...
 
Nara Chandrababu Naidu's Visionary Policies For Andhra Pradesh's Development
Nara Chandrababu Naidu's Visionary Policies For Andhra Pradesh's DevelopmentNara Chandrababu Naidu's Visionary Policies For Andhra Pradesh's Development
Nara Chandrababu Naidu's Visionary Policies For Andhra Pradesh's Development
 
WhatsApp 📞 8448380779 ✅Call Girls In Chaura Sector 22 ( Noida)
WhatsApp 📞 8448380779 ✅Call Girls In Chaura Sector 22 ( Noida)WhatsApp 📞 8448380779 ✅Call Girls In Chaura Sector 22 ( Noida)
WhatsApp 📞 8448380779 ✅Call Girls In Chaura Sector 22 ( Noida)
 
06052024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
06052024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf06052024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
06052024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
 
Julius Randle's Injury Status: Surgery Not Off the Table
Julius Randle's Injury Status: Surgery Not Off the TableJulius Randle's Injury Status: Surgery Not Off the Table
Julius Randle's Injury Status: Surgery Not Off the Table
 
Embed-4.pdf lkdiinlajeklhndklheduhuekjdh
Embed-4.pdf lkdiinlajeklhndklheduhuekjdhEmbed-4.pdf lkdiinlajeklhndklheduhuekjdh
Embed-4.pdf lkdiinlajeklhndklheduhuekjdh
 
Enjoy Night ≽ 8448380779 ≼ Call Girls In Gurgaon Sector 46 (Gurgaon)
Enjoy Night ≽ 8448380779 ≼ Call Girls In Gurgaon Sector 46 (Gurgaon)Enjoy Night ≽ 8448380779 ≼ Call Girls In Gurgaon Sector 46 (Gurgaon)
Enjoy Night ≽ 8448380779 ≼ Call Girls In Gurgaon Sector 46 (Gurgaon)
 
Powerful Love Spells in Phoenix, AZ (310) 882-6330 Bring Back Lost Lover
Powerful Love Spells in Phoenix, AZ (310) 882-6330 Bring Back Lost LoverPowerful Love Spells in Phoenix, AZ (310) 882-6330 Bring Back Lost Lover
Powerful Love Spells in Phoenix, AZ (310) 882-6330 Bring Back Lost Lover
 
04052024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
04052024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf04052024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
04052024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
 
1971 war india pakistan bangladesh liberation.ppt
1971 war india pakistan bangladesh liberation.ppt1971 war india pakistan bangladesh liberation.ppt
1971 war india pakistan bangladesh liberation.ppt
 
Enjoy Night⚡Call Girls Iffco Chowk Gurgaon >༒8448380779 Escort Service
Enjoy Night⚡Call Girls Iffco Chowk Gurgaon >༒8448380779 Escort ServiceEnjoy Night⚡Call Girls Iffco Chowk Gurgaon >༒8448380779 Escort Service
Enjoy Night⚡Call Girls Iffco Chowk Gurgaon >༒8448380779 Escort Service
 
₹5.5k {Cash Payment} Independent Greater Noida Call Girls In [Delhi INAYA] 🔝|...
₹5.5k {Cash Payment} Independent Greater Noida Call Girls In [Delhi INAYA] 🔝|...₹5.5k {Cash Payment} Independent Greater Noida Call Girls In [Delhi INAYA] 🔝|...
₹5.5k {Cash Payment} Independent Greater Noida Call Girls In [Delhi INAYA] 🔝|...
 
Defensa de JOH insiste que testimonio de analista de la DEA es falso y solici...
Defensa de JOH insiste que testimonio de analista de la DEA es falso y solici...Defensa de JOH insiste que testimonio de analista de la DEA es falso y solici...
Defensa de JOH insiste que testimonio de analista de la DEA es falso y solici...
 
Busty Desi⚡Call Girls in Sector 62 Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort Service
Busty Desi⚡Call Girls in Sector 62 Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort ServiceBusty Desi⚡Call Girls in Sector 62 Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort Service
Busty Desi⚡Call Girls in Sector 62 Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort Service
 
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Sector 135 Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort Service
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Sector 135 Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort ServiceBDSM⚡Call Girls in Sector 135 Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort Service
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Sector 135 Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort Service
 
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Greater Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort Service
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Greater Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort ServiceBDSM⚡Call Girls in Greater Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort Service
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Greater Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort Service
 
Enjoy Night ≽ 8448380779 ≼ Call Girls In Gurgaon Sector 47 (Gurgaon)
Enjoy Night ≽ 8448380779 ≼ Call Girls In Gurgaon Sector 47 (Gurgaon)Enjoy Night ≽ 8448380779 ≼ Call Girls In Gurgaon Sector 47 (Gurgaon)
Enjoy Night ≽ 8448380779 ≼ Call Girls In Gurgaon Sector 47 (Gurgaon)
 
Group_5_US-China Trade War to understand the trade
Group_5_US-China Trade War to understand the tradeGroup_5_US-China Trade War to understand the trade
Group_5_US-China Trade War to understand the trade
 

20 whose the_boss

  • 1.
  • 2. Cities During Industrialization • Business and industrialization centered on the cities. The increasing number of factories created a need for labor, convincing people in rural areas to move to the city, and drawing immigrants from Europe to the United States. As a result, the United States transformed from a farming to an urban nation.
  • 3. Immigration • Roughly 10 million European immigrants settled in the U.S. between 1860 and 1890. • The transition to American life was difficult for immigrants. They lived in dirty, crowded conditions in tenements. Tenements had few windows, limited plumbing and electricity, and tiny rooms often packed with people. People living in the tenements experienced disease, high infant mortality, and high levels of pollution. • Immigrants, also faced discrimination in the workplace from native workers who resented the immigrants’ willingness to accept lower wages and work in worse conditions.
  • 4.
  • 5. Why did Political Bosses Emerge? Chicago, 1890 • Populations in major cities such as New York and Philadelphia doubled, and in the case of Chicago quadrupled, due to the migration of farmers and immigrants. • Municipal (city) governments were unprepared to handle the population growth of cities. Many city governments took a laissez-faire (hands-off) approach. For example, systems for sanitation, sewer, roads, etc. were not built for populations that large. • Political bosses took advantage of the situation for their own political gain.
  • 6. Political Machines • Local politics during this era were marked by “machine politics”, because the system and the party, rather than individuals, held power. • In virtually every region of the U.S., local officials, or “machines,” bribed people, especially immigrants, for votes by providing political and economic benefits such as offices, jobs, and city contracts. • “Machines” were presided over by “party bosses,” professional politicians who dominated city government. These bosses often controlled the jobs of thousands of city workers and influenced the activities of schools, hospitals, and other city-run services. • Machine politics thrived on corruption, which contributed to the system’s collapse around the turn of the twentieth century.
  • 7. Political Machines (cont) • In U.S. politics, a political organization that controls enough votes to maintain political and administrative control of its community. • The rapid growth of cities in the 19th century created huge problems for city governments, which were often poorly organized and unable to provide services. • Enterprising politicians were able to win support by offering favors, including patronage jobs and housing, (BETTERING URBAN INFRASTRUCTURE) in exchange for votes. • Though machines often helped to restructure city governments to the benefit of their constituents, they just as often resulted in poorer service (when jobs were doled out as political rewards), corruption (when contracts or concessions were awarded in return for kickbacks), and aggravation of racial or ethnic hostilities (when the machine did not reflect the city's diversity). • Reforms, suburban flight, and a more mobile population with fewer ties to city neighborhoods have weakened machine politics.
  • 8. Operations of Political Machines • "What tells in holdin' your grip on your district is to go right down among the poor families and help them in the different ways they need help. I've got a regular system for this. If there's a fire in Ninth, Tenth, or Eleventh Avenue, for example, any hour of the day or night, I'm usually there with some of my election district captains as soon as the fire engines. If a family is burned out, I don't ask whether they are Republicans or Democrats, and I don't refer them to the Charity Organization Society, which would investigate their case in a month or two and decide they were worthy of help about the time they are dead from starvation. I just get quarters for them, buy clothes for them if their clothes were burned up, and fix them up till they get things runnin' again. It's philanthropy, but it's politics, too – mighty good politics. Who can tell how many votes one of these fires bring me? The poor are the most grateful people in the world, and, let me tell you, they have more friends in their neighborhoods than the rich have in theirs.” - George Washington Plunkitt
  • 10. Tammany Hall, located at Fourth Avenue and East 17th Street in New York City, ca. 1943.
  • 11. Tammany Hall • Tammany Hall was the name given to the Democratic political machine that dominated New York City politics from the 1854 through the election of LaGuardia in 1934. • The Tammany Society of New York City was founded in 1786 as a fraternal organization whose primary activities were social. By 1798, however, the society's activities had grown increasingly politicized. Eventually Tammany emerged as the central supporter of Jeffersonian policies in the city of New York.
  • 12. Tammany Hall (cont.) • Throughout the 1830s and 1840s, the society expanded its political control even further by earning the loyalty of the city's ever-expanding immigrant community. • The society helped newly arrived foreigners obtain jobs, find a place to live, and even earn citizenship so that they could vote for Tammany candidates in city and state elections. • William M. "Boss" Tweed was a famous political boss of Tammany Hall. His corrupt reign led to an attempt at reform in the early 1870s.
  • 13. Thomas Nast was the most important political cartoonist in 19th-century America, known for exposing government corruption.
  • 14. The ‘Brains.’ The Boss. -‘Well, what are you going to do about it?’” Harper’s Weekly, October 21, 1871, page 992. Taken from http://www.lib.ohio-state.edu/cgaweb/nast/keller
  • 15. Positive Aspects of Political Bosses • Political bosses ran a “welfare state” for urban poor. They helped the unemployed find jobs, provided food and coal to widows, and organized entertainment in neighborhoods. All of these items were contingent upon the poor voting for the political machine’s candidate. • Who benefited? • Immigrants, working poor • Political bosses gained political power • Improvements in Infrastructure • Public Libraries- world’s largest in Boston • Brooklyn Bridge and Central Park- New York City • 660 miles of water lines; 464 miles of sewer lines; 1,800 miles of paved streets
  • 16. Why don’t we have Political Bosses today? • No place for them in cities that are more organized and well planned out to handle large populations. • No huge waves of immigrants all at one time.
  • 17. Assignment • You are working in the campaign office for a political machine. Either you or someone you work for is running for a political office. Create a campaign flyer for the local candidate (or yourself). Remember who you are trying to target with your advertising and what types of incentives you can offer them for voting. What can you offer that would allow this group of people to consider voting for you. Include slogans, logos, pictures, the office, name of candidate, and other items for your campaign ad. • Use Microsoft Publisher to create your flyer. When you save the flyer, save it as your last name and as a “jpeg”. You will upload this file to the website when you are finished. • When finished with you ad, write a ½ page response of how your campaign ad would be different if you were running for a political office today. How would it be similar? Explain

Notas del editor

  1. Who’s the Boss?   The term political boss is many times associated with William Marcy Tweed better knows as “Boss Tweed” of New York City. During the Gilded Age, he was an alderman (representative) to New York City’s legislative body. He was never the mayor of the city. He did control the Tammany Hall political machine-- the most powerful machine of all urban machines. Political machines offered services to voters and businesses in exchange for political or financial support.   The name Tammany was from a club designed to help the poor in the late 1700s. The nickname “Tiger” was coined for the work of the Tammany Hall machine or “Tweed Ring” as it was sometimes called. The “Tiger” bribed the police, elected officials, and anyone who would take money (graft).   The new immigrants to New York City actually benefited from “The Tiger” in getting started in America. The members of the political machine spoke to them in their own languages, helped them in find jobs and housing, and in return the immigrants pledged them their votes. All of this was for a price. City improvements were not addressed. The overcrowded tenements, traffic congestion, air pollution, and unsanitary conditions were the norm rather than the exception for the 700,000 people of the city.   The living conditions of the city were so poor and the graft and corruption so high that the famous cartoonist Thomas Nast of the New York’s Harper’s Weekly began drawing political cartoons of Tweed’s corruption. Boss Tweed offered Nast half a million dollars to stop drawing the cartoons. Nast declined to accept and kept on drawing.   Because of the public’s outrage, Tweed was arrested along with other member of the ring and charged with fraud. He was sent to jail and died in jail at the age of 55. Political corruption occurred on the national level as well as the local. The idea of rewarding friends with political jobs started in the early 1800s (spoils system) and continued on into the Gilded Age. The desire for power and money during this time led many elected officials to give government jobs to those of the same party who had helped them get elected. Patronage, as it was commonly called, became a problem as more and more unqualified and corrupt workers were hired for government jobs. As the Gilded Age saw more and more corruption an end to the system of patronage was deemed necessary. A cry from the public to give government jobs to more qualified people regardless of their party was heard throughout the nation. Thus, the civil service (government administration) was born. President Chester A. Arthur pushed through the Pendleton Civil Service Act of 1883. This act created a civil service commission to give government jobs based on merit and not politics. After the passage of the act, the politicians did not have jobs to offer for votes and money, and as a result, they began having trouble gathering financial support. More and more politicians began seeking the support of wealthy business leaders to fill this void.   To continue learning more about politics in the Gilded Age, please read in your textbook pp. 267 and 271. When finished reading, please complete the graphic organizer on------
  2. http--www.americanhistory.abc-clio.com-Images-DBImages-4195-419511w.jpg
  3. http--www.americanhistory.abc-clio.com-Images-DBImages-2715-271506w.jpg